What Is Upside-Down Text, and How Does the Flip Work?
Upside-down text (uʍop ǝpᴉsdn) is not your letters flipped — it is a swap of Unicode lookalike characters plus a reversed word. Here is the trick, and why it sometimes breaks.
One box, a wall of weird — upside-down, mirrored, mixed and oddball Unicode styles all at once. Scroll, find the strangest one, and copy.
This page throws the widest net: instead of one look, it converts your text into a long list of unusual Unicode styles — upside-down, fullwidth, circled, struck-through and stranger mixes. They all copy and paste like any other text, because they are real Unicode characters rather than images or fonts.
The most extreme looks lean on stacked or substituted characters that some apps cannot draw, so they are kept in a separate “risky” group with a warning. Weird styles also hit missing-letter gaps more often than plain ones; when a character has no oddball variant we keep the original and underline it, instead of silently dropping it.