Outline Pofe 3 is a very light, very wide, low contrast, italic, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, sports branding, gaming, tech branding, futuristic, sporty, technical, dynamic, retro, speed emphasis, display impact, tech styling, branding focus, slanted, blocky, angular, chamfered, inline.
An all-outline, slanted display face built from broad, squared forms with chamfered corners and occasional notches and cut-ins that emphasize direction and speed. Counters are generally compact and rectilinear, with rounded-rectangle treatment in letters like O/Q and squared interior apertures elsewhere. The contour is consistently thin and even, creating a crisp hollow silhouette; joins are sharp and geometric, and many horizontals end in clipped or stepped terminals. Proportions are expansive with a strong forward lean, and widths vary by character while maintaining a cohesive, engineered rhythm.
Best suited to large-scale display settings such as headlines, posters, title cards, and branding where an energetic, forward-leaning look is desired. It can also work well for sports and motorsport identities, gaming/arcade graphics, and tech-themed packaging or event materials, especially when paired with solid fills, strokes, or layered effects.
The overall tone reads fast and modern, with a sporty, automotive energy and a hint of arcade/sci‑fi styling. Its outlined construction feels lightweight and high-tech, while the angular cuts and slant add urgency and motion.
The design appears intended to deliver a streamlined, speed-oriented geometric voice in an outline construction, prioritizing impact and stylized legibility over text-setting neutrality. The consistent chamfers, cut-ins, and forward slant suggest an aim toward dynamic branding and attention-grabbing display typography.
Numerals follow the same squared, aerodynamic logic, with simple, legible forms and distinctive corner clipping that helps them stand out in headlines. The outline-only construction means interior whitespace plays a major role, so the design feels most convincing when given enough size or contrast against the background.