Solid Weby 1 is a very bold, wide, medium contrast, upright, tall x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, logotypes, game ui, album covers, futuristic, techno, arcade, industrial, sci-fi, impact, tech aesthetic, modular build, compact set, blocky, rounded, geometric, stencil-like, compact.
A heavy, geometric display face built from chunky, rounded rectangles with frequent internal cut-ins and collapsed counters that read as horizontal slits or notches. Curves are broad and squared-off, terminals are blunt, and many joins form stepped, almost pixel-like transitions rather than smooth calligraphic modulation. The uppercase feels more rigid and modular, while the lowercase introduces more asymmetry and idiosyncratic shapes, reinforcing an intentionally engineered, constructed rhythm. Figures and several letters use inset “window” details and filled interior spaces, producing a dense silhouette with minimal whitespace and strong block-to-block continuity in text.
Best suited to large-scale display settings such as posters, title cards, branding marks, packaging callouts, and game or tech-themed UI headings where its dense shapes and slit details remain clear. It can also work for short bursts of text—tags, badges, and section headers—when the goal is impact and a distinctly constructed, futuristic voice.
The overall tone is unapologetically synthetic and mechanical, evoking sci‑fi interfaces, arcade hardware, and industrial labeling. Its dense black mass and slit-like openings create a tough, armored feel that reads bold and assertive rather than friendly or literary.
The design appears intended to deliver maximum visual mass with a modular, machine-made aesthetic, using collapsed interiors and notch-like cutaways to create character differentiation without relying on open counters. It prioritizes silhouette, rhythm, and a tech-forward personality over conventional text-face clarity.
At smaller sizes the collapsed counters and tight internal apertures can merge, so the design reads best when given room and scale. Spacing appears geared toward compact, headline-style set lines where the strong outer silhouette does most of the legibility work.