Slab Square Pepa 1 is a regular weight, wide, monoline, upright, normal x-height, monospaced font.
Keywords: code samples, ui labels, terminal styling, game ui, posters, retro, techy, industrial, utilitarian, game-like, grid discipline, retro computing, technical clarity, industrial labeling, systematic texture, square-serif, blocky, geometric, angular, pixel-like.
A rigid, geometric slab serif built from straight strokes and right angles, with flat, square-ended terminals and consistent stroke thickness. Counters are rectangular and open, and curves are largely avoided or rendered as faceted corners, giving the alphabet a constructed, modular feel. Proportions read broad and steady, with generous horizontal spans, a controlled rhythm, and a distinctly grid-aligned look across capitals, lowercase, and numerals.
This face is well-suited to code snippets, UI labels, dashboards, and other interface-like typography where a grid-structured, technical voice is desired. It can also work effectively for retro computing themes in posters, packaging callouts, and branding accents that benefit from a sturdy, squared slab serif presence.
The overall tone is retro-digital and utilitarian, evoking early computer terminals, arcade-era interfaces, and industrial labeling. Its blunt slabs and squared geometry project a no-nonsense, engineered personality that feels technical, systematic, and slightly nostalgic.
The design appears intended to translate slab-serif cues into a strict, orthogonal system optimized for consistent spacing and a crisp, mechanical texture. By emphasizing square terminals and rectilinear counters, it aims for a clear, engineered look that feels at home in digital and industrial contexts.
Uppercase forms appear especially architectural, while the lowercase keeps the same squared logic, creating a cohesive texture in paragraphs. The numerals follow the same boxy construction, supporting a consistent, schematic color across mixed-content settings.