This is a super handy feature, and essentially means you can curate your own custom font list, so that only the fonts you want to see appear when you click the drop down Fonts menu. You can also deselect any fonts that you don’t want to appear in the drop down list. You’ll know that it’s selected when the font name turns blue, and has a small blue tick to the left. This opens a new window containing all the Google Fonts.įrom here, you can click any font to add it to your Google Slides drop down list. Simply click the Fonts drop down in the toolbar, and select More fonts… right at the top. What’s more, you can access the entire Google Fonts library from within Google Slides. This means you can choose from over 800 fonts and bring some variety to your presentation projects. Using Google Slides means you can access and make use of the entire Google Fonts library. So we’ve whittled down our 9 favourite Google Slides features that we think Microsoft could take on board! Curate a personalised font library with access to 800+ Google Fonts It has an intuitive interface that makes it incredibly easy to use, and whilst it isn’t as feature-heavy as PowerPoint, regular updates mean it’s slowly catching up! Google Slides benefits from being a browser-based application, and has some unique features that we think are pretty impressive. At BrightCarbon we also love using Google Slides. But that doesn’t mean it can’t learn a thing or two from other players in the field. It’s been around the longest, has heaps of useful features, and is perhaps the most widely used. Microsoft PowerPoint is often considered the gold standard of presentation software.