Outline Liza 7 is a regular weight, normal width, high contrast, upright, tall x-height font.
Keywords: game ui, posters, headlines, logos, album art, retro tech, arcade, glitchy, industrial, edgy, retro computing, arcade feel, glitch texture, display impact, tech branding, pixelated, angular, outlined, chamfered, jagged.
A sharply geometric outline face with squared proportions, hard corners, and frequent chamfered/stepped cuts that create a pixel-like contour. The design is built from a single outer contour with open counters, giving a hollow, stencil-adjacent presence while maintaining clear letter silhouettes. Stroke behavior stays consistent as an even outline, with occasional intentional nicks and jagged interruptions that add texture and break perfect symmetry; curves are largely replaced by faceted segments and clipped terminals.
Best suited to short display settings where its outlined construction and jagged detailing can be appreciated—game titles and UI labels, event posters, tech-themed headlines, logos, and album/merch graphics. It can work in all-caps or mixed-case, but will be most effective at medium to large sizes where the contour cuts remain crisp and readable.
The overall tone reads as retro-digital and arcade-like, with a gritty, hacked-in texture that suggests glitch aesthetics and low-resolution graphics. It feels playful but tough—more “console UI / industrial signage” than classic display elegance.
The font appears designed to evoke pixel-era computing and arcade typography through faceted outlines and controlled irregularities, delivering a bold display voice without relying on filled strokes. The hollow construction emphasizes shape and silhouette while the glitch-like edge treatment adds personality and a sense of digital grit.
Spacing and rhythm are fairly compact and modular, and the most distinctive trait is the deliberate roughness along edges—small bite-outs and stepped corners that create motion and attitude without collapsing legibility. Numerals and capitals carry a blocky, sign-like stance, and the lowercase mirrors the same rigid, constructed logic for consistent texture across mixed-case settings.