Outline Urge 13 is a very light, normal width, low contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, logos, sports, badges, retro, athletic, game-like, industrial, playful, display impact, sports branding, retro styling, graphic outlining, badge lettering, outlined, squared, angular, notched, collegiate.
An outlined, all-caps–friendly display face built from straight strokes and squared-off corners, with occasional chamfered and notched details. The letterforms are predominantly boxy and geometric, with rectangular counters and a consistent contour thickness that keeps the silhouette crisp. Several capitals feature small cut-ins and bracket-like terminals that create a stencil-ish, constructed feel, while the lowercase echoes the same rigid, modular geometry. Numerals follow the same squared construction, maintaining a uniform rhythm across the set.
Best suited to display work such as headlines, posters, team or event branding, badges, and packaging where the outlined construction can be a deliberate stylistic feature. It can also work well for titles in game or retro-themed graphics, especially when paired with fills, shadows, or color to emphasize the hollow forms.
The overall tone reads as retro and sporty, with a strong hint of scoreboard/jersey lettering and arcade-era display type. Its hollow outline gives it a lightweight, graphic presence that feels energetic and a bit playful, especially at larger sizes. The angular notches add a crafted, emblematic character associated with badges and athletic branding.
The design appears intended as a bold, emblematic outline display font that references athletic block lettering while adding distinctive notches and squared geometry for personality. Its consistent modular construction suggests it was made to produce clean, repeatable shapes for branding-style typography rather than continuous reading text.
Because the design is purely contour-based, the font’s impact depends heavily on size, background contrast, and line thickness in reproduction; it will appear more confident when given room to breathe. The squared counters and tight interior spaces suggest avoiding very small settings where the outlines may visually merge or get busy.