Font Hero

Free for Commercial Use

Pixel Dago 2 is a regular weight, normal width, low contrast, upright, normal x-height font.

Keywords: game ui, pixel art, headlines, posters, album art, retro tech, arcade, glitchy, modular, playful, retro digital, modular styling, display impact, pixel texture, pixelated, rounded corners, segmented, monoline, geometric.


Free for commercial use
Customize the font name

A segmented, pixel-built design with chunky strokes and rounded pixel corners that soften the otherwise rigid grid. Letterforms are assembled from small rectangular modules with frequent gaps and stepped joins, creating a broken, quantized rhythm rather than continuous outlines. Curves are suggested through staggered segments, and counters tend to be small and boxy. The overall texture reads as monoline and sturdy, with a distinctive dotted/fragmented construction that stays consistent across caps, lowercase, and numerals.

Well suited to game interfaces, pixel-art branding, and retro-tech headlines where the segmented construction can be appreciated. It works especially well for titles, short labels, and punchy poster typography, and can add character to album art or event graphics that lean into an 8‑bit or digital aesthetic.

The font conveys a retro-digital, arcade-like tone with a subtle glitch or scanline feel created by its intentional breaks and modular joins. It feels techy and experimental but still friendly due to the rounded pixel terminals and generous spacing between segments.

The design appears intended to reinterpret classic bitmap lettering with a more modular, broken-up stroke system, emphasizing grid-based construction while introducing rounded pixel terminals for approachability. Its goal is likely to deliver a distinctive digital voice that feels both nostalgic and intentionally stylized rather than strictly utilitarian.

At larger sizes the modular construction becomes a defining graphic feature, producing a lively, dithered sparkle in text. In longer passages the frequent discontinuities can reduce smooth word-shape recognition, so the design reads best when treated as a display pixel face rather than a quiet text workhorse.

Letter — Basic Uppercase Latin
A
B
C
D
E
F
G
H
I
J
K
L
M
N
O
P
Q
R
S
T
U
V
W
X
Y
Z
Letter — Basic Lowercase Latin
a
b
c
d
e
f
g
h
i
j
k
l
m
n
o
p
q
r
s
t
u
v
w
x
y
z
Number — Decimal Digit
0
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
Letter — Extended Uppercase Latin
À
Á
Â
Ã
Ä
Å
Æ
Ç
È
É
Ê
Ë
Ì
Í
Î
Ï
Ñ
Ò
Ó
Ô
Õ
Ö
Ø
Ù
Ú
Û
Ü
Ý
Ć
Č
Đ
Ė
Ę
Ě
Ğ
Į
İ
Ľ
Ł
Ń
Ő
Œ
Ś
Ş
Š
Ū
Ű
Ų
Ŵ
Ŷ
Ÿ
Ź
Ž
Letter — Extended Lowercase Latin
ß
à
á
â
ã
ä
å
æ
ç
è
é
ê
ë
ì
í
î
ï
ñ
ò
ó
ô
õ
ö
ø
ù
ú
û
ü
ý
ÿ
ć
č
đ
ė
ę
ě
ğ
į
ı
ľ
ł
ń
ő
œ
ś
ş
š
ū
ű
ų
ŵ
ŷ
ź
ž
Letter — Superscript Latin
ª
º
Number — Superscript
¹
²
³
Number — Fraction
½
¼
¾
Punctuation
!
#
*
,
.
/
:
;
?
\
¡
·
¿
Punctuation — Quote
"
'
«
»
Punctuation — Parenthesis
(
)
[
]
{
}
Punctuation — Dash
-
_
Symbol
&
@
|
¦
§
©
®
°
Symbol — Currency
$
¢
£
¤
¥
Symbol — Math
%
+
<
=
>
~
¬
±
^
µ
×
÷
Diacritics
`
´
¯
¨
¸