If you’re on a limited budget, free fonts are a life saver. This is due to the iOS environment being more ‘locked down’ compared to its desktop counterparts. If you’re using Affinity Designer or Affinity Photo on iPad, you’ll have to install your free font via the Preferences (Fonts tab) before it becomes available to your app. Not surprisingly, your downloaded free font will install and be made available to Affinity Designer, Photo and Publisher as for other fonts on macOS and Windows systems. Well yes, they are, but it’s worth noting that the free font may have a more limited glyph and special character support compared to a purchased font. Registering and subsequent login doesn’t reduce the volume of advertising displayed. The Bad: Another site that offers a multitude of adverts masquerading as font category navigation, and use the Themes filter or search feature you should be able to get what you need. What looks like a popular forum helps users identify fonts visually. The Good: The site offers filtering by themes (e.g., fancy, gothic, techno) and font designer. The fonts encountered were mainly free for personal use only. The site covers a wide range of fonts (they quote 43,030!) segregated into many font categories. Searching for Roboto font on daft font ().