Font: Dvb-ttdhruv

If you want, I can:

If you want to use it on a web page (e.g., for a simulated TV interface), convert it to WOFF2 first using FontForge or CloudConvert: Dvb-ttdhruv Font

@font-face 
  font-family: 'Dvb-ttdhruv';
  src: url('Dvb-ttdhruv.woff2') format('woff2');
  font-weight: normal;
  font-style: normal;
.teletext 
  font-family: 'Dvb-ttdhruv', monospace;

The ambiguity surrounding Dvb-ttdhruv Font raises red flags regarding licensing. If you want, I can: If you want to use it on a web page (e

Recommendation: Before using Dvb-ttdhruv for commercial broadcast or a web project, either contact the original equipment manufacturer (if known) or choose a legally safe alternative (see below). The ambiguity surrounding Dvb-ttdhruv Font raises red flags

To obtain or verify this font:

The typeface tentatively identified as "Dvb-ttdhruv" has been cited in limited digital contexts, yet no formal documentation or specimen exists in major typographic registries. This paper examines the possible origins, encoding structure, and intended application of the font, hypothesizing that "Dvb" correlates with DVB‑TT (Digital Video Broadcasting – Terrestrial Television) subtitling or EPG character sets, while "dhruv" may indicate a designer or project codename. We conclude that, if real, Dvb‑ttdhruv likely serves a technical, non‑Latin script function, possibly for Devanagari or other Indic scripts.