Outline Orhe 9 is a light, wide, low contrast, italic, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, game ui, tech branding, logotypes, techno, retro, arcade, glitchy, sci‑fi, digital aesthetic, retro futurism, display impact, glitch effect, wireframe look, angular, monoline, outlined, geometric, broken strokes.
A slanted, monoline outline design built from angular segments and squared corners. Strokes are defined by an outer contour with open counters, creating a hollow, wireframe effect; many letters include stepped breaks and offset overlaps that read like a doubled path or misregistered outline. Proportions skew extended with compact internal space, and the drawing favors straight horizontals/verticals with occasional diagonal joints. The rhythm is intentionally irregular in places—especially in junctions and terminals—producing a slightly “glitched” silhouette while maintaining consistent stroke thickness and a cohesive grid-like construction.
Well-suited to display use such as headlines, posters, title cards, and stylized logotypes where the outlined, offset construction can read clearly. It also fits interface-inspired graphics—game UI, sci‑fi panels, and event branding—especially when used at larger sizes or with generous tracking.
The overall tone feels digital and game-adjacent, evoking arcade displays, 8-bit/UI overlays, and retro sci‑fi interfaces. The staggered overlaps and occasional pixel-like steps add an energetic, hacked-tech attitude that reads playful rather than formal.
The design appears intended to blend an outline display structure with a deliberately distorted, digital misalignment effect. Its geometry and stepped interruptions suggest a purpose-built aesthetic for futuristic and retro-computing themes rather than continuous-text reading.
The outline-only construction makes the face visually airy, with the interior white space carrying much of the letter recognition. Because the contours are open and the joins are sharp, the design tends to look best when given enough size and spacing so the layered outlines and breaks remain legible.