Board Thread:Support Requests - Designing Your Wiki/@comment-33688175-20200317170752/@comment-9605025-20200403222936

Yes, I am here. I was just composing a long response. I will paste it below. - That (what UpnCbs06 posted) works but only if the font is available from Google Fonts. While I did find several fonts that included "Aloha" in their name, I did not find one that matched exactly.

Devices don't magically know what a font is. Something has to tell it what Times New Roman, Ariel, Wing Dings, Helvetica, Cambira, etc. look like. The same goes for your font. This information is stored in font files (of which there are several types). If a website does not provide this file, then the browser relies on the files stored on the viewer's device. If the device does not have the requested font, it doesn't work.

There is no definitive list of fonts that all devices must have. However, there are some that are so common they are referred to as web-safe fonts. If you use one of these fonts, chances are it will be okay. If you are using a font that is not on this list, chances are you will need to supply the font file.

When supplying a font file, you are responsible for ensuring that your use is permitted by the license of the font file. Some hosts allow you to directly access the file via a URL. This is the case with Google Fonts. If the font is available from one of these hosts, then you can use a similar method to that described on the help page UpnCbs06 linked to; except replacing the example URL with whichever URL is appropriate for that host.

If the host does not provide a direct URL, you will need to download the file from the host and then upload the file to your wiki. By default, Fandom wikis do not permit the upload of font files. Therefore, if you need to upload your font file, you will need to first to enable support for whichever file type your font file uses. Once the file has been uploaded, you will need to use @font-face to import the font.