Outline Lawi 3 is a regular weight, wide, monoline, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: display, headlines, posters, logos, ui titles, sci‑fi, tech, digital, arcade, industrial, futuristic styling, technical labeling, display impact, modular system, squared, rounded corners, modular, geometric, stencil-like.
A geometric outline sans built from squared forms with softly rounded outer corners and consistent stroke spacing. Letters are constructed on a modular, almost circuit-like skeleton, with frequent right-angle turns, open counters, and occasional internal notches or cut-ins that create a stenciled, segmented feel. Curves are minimized and when present are squarish, producing rectangular bowls and boxy terminals; diagonals appear selectively (notably in V/W/X/Y/K) and keep the same monoline rhythm. The overall silhouette reads wide and airy, with the outline treatment emphasizing interior space and giving characters a hollow, framed look.
Best suited for display typography where the outline can breathe: headlines, posters, title cards, logos, and sci‑fi or tech-themed branding. It also works well for short UI labels or interface-style headings when used at sufficiently large sizes to preserve the outline detail.
The font conveys a futuristic, digital tone—clean, engineered, and slightly game-like. Its outlined construction and squared geometry suggest interfaces, hardware labeling, and retro computer/arcade aesthetics while staying crisp and controlled rather than playful or handwritten.
The design appears intended to deliver a modular, futuristic outline aesthetic with strong geometric consistency and a constructed, technical voice. The use of cut-ins and squared curves helps differentiate glyphs while maintaining a cohesive, grid-based system.
Spacing and proportions favor clear, open interiors, but the outline-only rendering makes thin joins and small interior cuts more prominent, especially at smaller sizes. Distinctive forms include a boxy, framed zero and angular numerals that maintain the same squared-corner logic as the capitals.