Pixel Dash Fiba 2 is a regular weight, very narrow, low contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: ui labels, scoreboards, data display, packaging accents, posters, industrial, retro tech, instrumental, utilitarian, digital, device mimicry, technical display, retro computing, graphic texture, systematic grid, segmented, stenciled, modular, monoline, gridlike.
A modular, quantized letterform built from short horizontal dash segments stacked into vertical strokes, creating a distinctly broken, segmented texture. The rhythm is strongly grid-based with mostly rectilinear geometry, squared terminals, and minimal curvature rendered through stepped segments. Counters are compact and angular, and joins often appear implied rather than continuous, lending a slightly stencil-like construction. Spacing and proportions favor tight, condensed forms with consistent dash sizing and a steady baseline presence that reads like printed output from a device.
Works well for interface labels, HUD-style overlays, dashboards, and any data-forward display where a device-like aesthetic is desired. It can also serve as a strong accent face in posters, packaging, or album artwork to evoke industrial or retro-tech cues. For long passages, it’s best used at sizes where the segmented pattern stays crisp and intentional.
The font conveys a retro-digital, machine-made tone reminiscent of instrumentation readouts and early computer or terminal graphics. Its segmented construction feels technical and utilitarian, with a subtle sense of motion from the repeating bar pattern. Overall it suggests measurement, system status, and engineered precision rather than warmth or calligraphic personality.
The design appears intended to emulate segmented printing or display technology by constructing each glyph from repeated dash units on a tight grid. It prioritizes a distinctive digital texture and technical atmosphere while keeping letterforms straightforward and readable within the constraints of a modular system.
The repeated dash pattern produces a pronounced horizontal scanline effect that remains visible even at larger sizes, giving text a textured, electronic cadence. Diagonals and curves are interpreted through stair-stepped segments, which reinforces the font’s mechanical character and makes it most distinctive when the segmentation can be clearly seen.