Solid Boby 6 is a light, normal width, medium contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: posters, titles, logos, album art, gaming, techno, industrial, cryptic, futuristic, edgy, visual impact, futurism, experimental forms, coded aesthetic, graphic texture, octagonal, chamfered, monoline, stenciled, modular.
A monoline, geometric display face built from straight strokes and chamfered corners, with many curves replaced by octagonal facets. The design mixes open, outline-like letterforms with selectively solid, filled-in counters and terminals, creating a stop-start rhythm and an intentionally uneven texture. Strokes are generally thin and consistent, with occasional heavy blocks used as interior fills or clipped bowls, and several glyphs show angular notches that suggest a stencil or cut-metal construction. Proportions are compact and modular, with simplified joins and a crisp, mechanical baseline presence.
Best suited for short-form display settings where its faceted geometry and filled-counter effects can be appreciated—posters, headlines, logos, packaging accents, album art, and gaming or sci‑fi themed graphics. It can also work for UI or signage moments as a stylistic accent, but longer text will read more as texture than as continuous body copy.
The overall tone feels techno and industrial, with a cryptic, coded character created by the alternating open shapes and solid black inserts. Its sharp geometry and faceted curves read as futuristic and slightly aggressive, lending an edgy, experimental mood that prioritizes attitude over neutrality.
The font appears designed to explore a hybrid of outline construction and collapsed/filled interiors, using chamfered geometry to evoke a mechanical, fabricated look. The goal seems to be a striking, coded aesthetic with high visual identity and strong poster impact rather than conventional readability.
The alternating use of filled areas inside normally open counters produces strong figure–ground effects and can shift perceived weight from glyph to glyph. Numerals and rounded letters lean heavily on octagonal construction, reinforcing the modular system and giving the font a distinctive, engineered silhouette.