Fonts
1. Librera and Moon+Reader Pro each come with additional fonts. Librera comes with Comfortaa, PTAstraSans, and PTAstraSerif. Moon+Reader Pro comes with Calluna and Vollkorn.
Winner: Moon+Reader, because Calluna and Vollkorn are both nice serf fonts, whereas PTAstraSerif is the only serif that comes with Librera. However, free Librera beats free Moon+Reader, because it includes its additional fonts without additional payment.
2. Both Moon+Reader and Librera support custom fonts, but Moon+Reader supports only TTF fonts, and Librera supports both TTF and OTF fonts.
Winner: Librera, because it supports more custom fonts.
3. Moon+Reader and Librera support embedded fonts, though Moon+Reader seems to support it for EPUB but not for MOBI.
Winner: Librera
4. In Librera, turning on support for embedded fonts is done by selecting the "Document" value for Styles in Reading Settings, and one side effect of this is that you cannot change the font in a book that does not have embedded fonts. Although you might think that "Document + User Defined" value would use embedded fonts where available, it just uses whatever font is selected rather than the embedded font. In Moon+Reader, turning on support for embedded fonts is done by selecting "Use embedded fonts in book" under Miscellaneous. This does not prevent the font from being changed when there is no embedded font.
Winner: Moon+Reader
5. The fonts requester for Moon+Reader is bigger than the one in Librera, making it easier to use.
Winner: Moon+Reader
6. The fonts requester in Moon+Reader lists every font variation, whereas the Librera fonts requester just lists each font once.
Winner: Librera, because I always choose a regular font anyway. I don't need to view a book entirely in italics or boldface.
Moon+Reader: 3
Librera: 3
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