Slab Square Pepa 2 is a regular weight, wide, monoline, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: display, posters, branding, packaging, headlines, techy, retro, mechanical, industrial, rational, geometric styling, technical voice, signage utility, retro computing, squared, geometric, blocky, stencil-like, rigid.
A squared, geometric slab-serif design with mostly monoline strokes and flat, right-angled terminals. The serifs read as rectangular feet and caps that extend the horizontal rhythm, while counters and apertures stay boxy and disciplined. Curves are minimized in favor of chamfered corners and straight segments, giving letters a constructed, grid-friendly presence. Spacing and proportions feel intentionally steady, producing a crisp texture in paragraphs with a distinctly rectilinear silhouette.
This font is well suited to display settings where a structured, technical character is desired—headlines, posters, packaging, and identity work for industrial or technology-adjacent themes. It can also work for short blocks of text or UI-style labeling when a rigid, squared texture is an intentional part of the design.
The overall tone is technical and utilitarian, evoking machinery labels, early digital interfaces, and engineered signage. Its sharp corners and modular construction communicate precision and control rather than softness or warmth.
The design appears intended to translate slab-serif sturdiness into a more modular, square-built system, prioritizing crisp geometry and repeatable stroke logic. It aims for high visual distinctiveness through angular construction and consistent, engineered detailing.
The uppercase set feels especially architectural, with strong horizontal caps and pronounced slab cues, while the lowercase keeps the same squared logic and compact joins. Numerals follow the same angular system, favoring straight-sided forms and cut corners that reinforce a consistent, mechanical voice across alphanumerics.