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For action stories you'll probably want to use Colin Brignall's 1965 font Countdown - as used on Countdown comic (d'uh!) as well as Byte magazine. You can almost hear the seconds counting down at the end of Rollerball as you squint at the text.
Arthur Ranson's artwork for Buck Rogers in the 25th Century. Look-In, 1981
Don't laugh, it keeps the rain off...
The Jester At Scar, by E C Tubb. Ace SF, 1982. Cover by Paul Alexander.
Soviet Nuclear Zeppelins. Three words that always inspire confidence...
Tekhnika Molodezhi magazine, 1971.
Before the internet Cinefantastique was one of the main ways horror and SF fans could get their did of news, featured and gossip about the genres they loved. At its best the magazine was a fan-focussed encyclopedia that has rarely been bettered.
As TV began to produce more speculative fiction, Cinefantastique increasingly turned its attention to the small screen in the 80s and 90s. What mattered was the genre, rather than the medium.
Mérou and his family eventually escape back to Earth in a rocket ship, but time-dilation means several centuries have passed there, and now the Earth too is ruled by apes.
The travellers chuckle at this tale: as civilised chimps they know no brute human could become so advanced.