TextArray
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Upside down text

Turn any text 180 degrees using Unicode characters that look reversed.

Input
Output

Upside down text

Type or paste anything and get it back rotated 180 degrees: uʍop ǝpᴉsdn. Nothing here is an image or a font. The tool swaps every letter for the Unicode character that looks like its turned twin — a becomes ɐ, e becomes ǝ, r becomes ɹ — and then reverses the reading order, so the line reads correctly once you turn your screen.

Because the result is ordinary text, it pastes anywhere Unicode is allowed: an Instagram bio, a TikTok comment, a Discord nickname, a chat message, a spreadsheet cell. It is a cheap way to make a profile stand out or drop a joke into a thread. A few older Windows apps and email clients have no glyph for some turned letters and show an empty box instead, so try the result where you plan to post it.

Four options shape the output. Switch the style to mirror and the text flips left to right instead of end over end, using shapes like Я, Ƨ and ɘ; Unicode ships fewer of those, so more of the input passes through untouched. Turn off reverse character order to keep the letters in place and only swap the shapes. Reverse line order completes a genuine rotation of a multi-line block. Accented letters such as á, ř, ő or ą have no turned forms at all, so by default the tool flips the base letter and drops the accent — switch that option off and they stay upright. Letters with no base form, like the German ß, always stay as they are and the tally counts them as unchanged.

Everything runs in your browser. Your text is never uploaded and never leaves your device. Copy the result, download it as a .txt file, or move it back to the input for another tool.

FAQ

Is this a font I have to install?
No. The output is made of ordinary Unicode characters, which is why it survives copy and paste into a bio, a nickname or a chat where you cannot change the font at all.
Why do some characters show up as empty boxes?
The device you pasted into has no glyph for that turned letter. It is a font gap on that platform rather than a broken result — test the text where you plan to post it and reword it if a box appears.
Can I turn flipped text back to normal?
Yes. Paste the flipped text into the input and run it again: the character table works both ways, so most text comes back. Accents dropped on the first pass are not restored.
How are accented letters handled?
Unicode has no turned á, ő or ą, so the tool flips the base letter and drops the accent by default. Turn off "Strip accents" and accented letters stay upright instead.
Is my text uploaded anywhere?
No. The tool runs entirely in your browser and your text never leaves your device.