Outline Lypi 2 is a regular weight, wide, low contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: posters, headlines, logotypes, ui titles, packaging, futuristic, technical, arcade, clean, playful, outlined display, tech aesthetic, retro modern, graphic impact, rounded, monoline, geometric, squared, inline.
A monoline outline face built from a single continuous contour with an inner parallel line that creates a hollow, double-stroke effect. Forms are broadly geometric with squared bowls and softened, rounded corners, giving the letters a smooth, engineered feel rather than a sharp industrial one. Stroke thickness is consistent throughout, terminals are blunt, and curves are drawn as rounded rectangles; diagonals (A, K, V, W, X, Y) stay sturdy and open. Proportions read on the wide side with generous counters and clear apertures, and the numerals follow the same rounded-rectangular construction for a cohesive, modular rhythm.
Well-suited for display typography such as posters, headings, product marks, and tech or gaming-themed branding where an outlined look is desired. It can also work for short UI titles, labels, and signage-style applications when given enough size and spacing to preserve the hollow detailing.
The overall tone is retro-futurist and tech-forward, evoking digital interfaces, arcade signage, and sporty display graphics. The hollow construction keeps the mood light and graphic, leaning more playful than severe while still reading as precise and systematic.
The design appears intended to provide a cohesive outlined aesthetic with a geometric, rounded-rect construction that stays legible and consistent across uppercase, lowercase, and figures. It aims to deliver a distinctive, modern-retro texture that stands out in branding and display settings without relying on heavy weight or contrast.
The double-line outline construction creates strong interior negative shapes that become a key part of the texture, especially in dense text. Because the design relies on contour and counter space rather than filled strokes, it tends to look most confident at medium-to-large sizes or when paired with sufficient tracking and high contrast against the background.