Outline Lyme 10 is a regular weight, wide, low contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, logotypes, game ui, sci-fi titles, tech, retro, arcade, geometric, futuristic, digital aesthetic, display impact, retro styling, modular construction, rectilinear, squared, monoline, outline, angular.
A rectilinear, squared outline design built from uniform stroke widths and crisp right angles, with occasional 45° diagonals for forms like K, V, X, Y, and Z. Counters are generally boxy and inset, giving many glyphs a concentric, circuit-like interior. Terminals are blunt and modular, and spacing feels generous, supporting a broad, open texture in lines of text. The character set maintains consistent grid logic across caps, lowercase, and figures, with simplified, geometric constructions (notably in rounded letters like O/Q and in numerals such as 0, 6, 8, and 9).
Best suited to display applications where the outlined geometry can be appreciated: headlines, posters, album or event titles, and branding marks. It also fits interface accents for games or tech-themed visuals, as well as short labels and signage where a retro-digital tone is desired.
The overall tone is digital and game-like, evoking classic arcade UI, early computer graphics, and sci‑fi instrumentation. Its outlined construction reads as engineered and schematic, producing a clean but playful, retro-futurist feel rather than a traditional typographic voice.
The font appears designed to translate pixel-era, modular construction into a clean vector outline, prioritizing a consistent grid and square counters for a distinctly digital aesthetic. Its simplified, engineered letterforms suggest an intent to deliver high-impact display typography with a recognizable arcade/sci‑fi signature.
At smaller sizes the interior cut-ins and thin outline-only structure may visually fill in or lose separation, while at display sizes the layered contours and square counters become a defining feature. The design’s strong grid discipline gives it a logo-friendly, iconographic presence, especially in all-caps settings.