Outline Lizo 1 is a regular weight, normal width, high contrast, italic, normal x-height font.
Keywords: game titles, sci‑fi posters, sports branding, headlines, logos, arcade, sci‑fi, edgy, glitchy, retro, dimensional effect, speed emphasis, tech styling, impact display, angular, chiseled, outlined, beveled, faceted.
An italic, all-caps-forward display face built from crisp outline contours and sharp, chamfered corners. Letters are constructed with squared curves, beveled terminals, and a consistent forward slant, giving the forms a cut-from-metal feel. The interior is largely open, with occasional stepped or notched details and a bold, offset shadow-like contour that reads as a hard extrude. The drawing favors geometric straight segments over smooth arcs, producing a faceted, technical rhythm across the alphabet and numerals.
Best suited to short, high-impact settings such as game UI titling, esports or sports identities, sci‑fi and tech event posters, product marks, and punchy headers. It can also work for badges, stickers, and packaging where an outlined, extruded look helps type stand out on busy backgrounds.
The overall tone is retro-futuristic and arcade-like, with an energetic lean and a slightly aggressive, industrial edge. The outline-plus-extrude treatment suggests speed, machinery, and action branding, while the intermittent fractured details add a hint of digital glitch and playfulness.
The design appears intended to deliver a dynamic, italic techno voice with an outline structure and a built-in extruded shadow for instant dimensionality. Its chamfered geometry and occasional glitch-like breaks prioritize attitude and motion over neutrality, aiming for recognizable display character in branding and title work.
Uppercase and lowercase share a closely related construction, with the lowercase keeping the same angular vocabulary and italic posture. Counters and apertures are generally rectangular and stepped, which maintains a consistent pixel-adjacent, techno texture at both letter and word level. The 3D/shadow impression is strong enough that spacing will feel visually tighter in dense settings than the outlines alone might suggest.