Solid Uska 10 is a very bold, normal width, medium contrast, upright, short x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, logos, gaming ui, album covers, futuristic, industrial, aggressive, techno, cryptic, high impact, sci-fi styling, logo display, coded texture, faceted, angular, notched, chiseled, stencil-like.
A heavy, solid display design built from compact blocks with sharp triangular notches and chamfered corners. The strokes feel cut from a single mass: counters are largely collapsed, and many letters rely on bite-like intrusions and wedge terminals to define their forms. Geometry alternates between hard straight edges and occasional rounded outer corners, creating a tense rhythm of facets and softening. Spacing and sidebearings read irregular by design, with some glyphs appearing wider or more compact depending on the silhouette.
Best suited to display contexts where shape and impact matter more than extended readability: posters, title cards, branding marks, packaging, and gaming/tech interface labels. It performs especially well when set large or with generous tracking, where the notches and angular rhythm can be clearly read.
The overall tone is edgy and mechanized, evoking sci‑fi interfaces, armored signage, and game UI labeling. Its sharp cuts and dense black shapes give it a cryptic, high-impact presence that feels more assertive than friendly. The notched construction also adds a hint of coded or arcane symbolism, suitable for titles that want intensity and intrigue.
The design appears intended to deliver maximum visual weight and a distinctive, carved silhouette without relying on interior counters. By using systematic notches, wedges, and faceted edges, it creates a recognizable techno/weaponized aesthetic that stands out immediately in short bursts of text.
At smaller sizes the collapsed interiors and dense silhouettes can reduce letter differentiation, while larger settings emphasize the distinctive cut-ins and wedge terminals. The uppercase has a particularly emblematic, logo-like feel, and the numerals follow the same faceted, blocky logic for consistent headline use.