Inline Fihi 4 is a very bold, wide, low contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: logos, headlines, posters, gaming, packaging, futuristic, techno, arcade, industrial, sci‑fi, impact, retro-future, tech styling, dimensionality, branding, rounded, geometric, monolinear, inline, caps-friendly.
A geometric display face built from heavy rounded rectangles and smooth corner radii, with a consistent inline channel running through the strokes. Counters are often squared-off with softened corners, and terminals tend to be blunt or gently rounded, creating a compact, engineered silhouette. The inline detail is generally centered and follows the stroke path, adding a layered, tube-like depth while keeping contrast minimal. Spacing reads open for a display style, and the forms stay steady and modular across uppercase, lowercase, and numerals.
Best suited to logos, titles, and short headline settings where the inline carving can be appreciated. It works especially well for tech branding, gaming/arcade graphics, sci‑fi themed artwork, packaging callouts, and UI-style hero text. For longer passages, larger sizes and generous tracking help preserve clarity of the internal inline detail.
The overall tone is boldly synthetic and retro-future, evoking control panels, arcade cabinets, and sci‑fi interfaces. The carved inline gives a lit-track or circuitry feel, adding energy without becoming ornate. It comes across confident, mechanical, and playful in a distinctly tech-forward way.
The design appears intended to deliver a high-impact, geometric sci‑fi look while adding depth through an inline cut that suggests tubing or illuminated channels. Its consistent modular construction prioritizes a cohesive, system-like aesthetic for display typography and branding environments.
Distinctive internal striping appears in several glyphs (notably the rounded bowls and curved letters), which increases visual texture and can create moiré-like density at smaller sizes. The lowercase retains the same squared, modular construction as the uppercase, reinforcing a uniform, display-oriented voice rather than a traditional text rhythm.