If you have tried using the original Gopika Two font file on modern Windows (like Windows 10 or 11) or inside Adobe Creative Cloud applications, you might have run into significant rendering glitches. This is where the demand for a comes from.

The font is likely not patched properly or doesn't support the specific encoding.

Unicode is a universal standard that assigns a unique, permanent number (a "code point") to every character in every language, including Gujarati. Fonts like Shruti (the default on Windows) and Noto Sans Gujarati (by Google) are Unicode-compliant. When you type in Gujarati on your smartphone or using a modern input tool, you are using Unicode, which is why text appears consistently across different devices—they all understand the same universal language of Unicode.