These passwords have 88.49 bits of entropy (secure enough for anything) and they are easy to type on a roku-style TV or phone keyboard if you find yourself in that situation (unlike completely random passwords). They are much shorter than word-based passwords of the same strength (diceware, etc), short enough to develop muscle memory on a keyboard if you must type one on a physical keyboard every day. Yes they use random strings of characters, but I don't mind, because I've found that after a while I notice patterns in the letters that help me remember them just as easy as word-based passwords - silly acronyms, dictionary words, or funny nonsense words or misspellings. They satisfy security checks for upper/lower/symbols/length. They follow a pattern that breaks them up for reading over the phone, or writing, or moving between devices. These passwords are not sent over the internet, they are generated within your browser. Refresh this page to generate a fresh batch.
If you just want a short password and don't care about weird characters, 13 random chars gives 85.21 bits of entropy:
If you just want a test password, here's a one with 24.51 bits of entropy:
(My Other Stuff)