Inline Hyho 6 is a regular weight, normal width, low contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, logos, packaging, signage, sci‑fi, retro, technical, industrial, futuristic, display impact, tech tone, retro futurism, decorative detail, inline, outlined, rounded corners, monoline, geometric.
A geometric sans with squared forms and softly rounded corners, built from monoline strokes that are split by a consistent internal inline channel. Curves are rendered as rounded rectangles rather than true circles, giving letters like O, C, and G a capsule-like silhouette. Terminals are crisp and generally flat, with occasional stepped joins where diagonals meet verticals (notably in K, V, W, X, and Y). The numerals and capitals follow the same constructed logic, producing an even, engineered rhythm that reads cleanly at display sizes where the inner line detail remains distinct.
Well-suited to headlines, posters, and branding where a futuristic or industrial voice is desired, especially in larger sizes that showcase the inline detailing. It can also work for signage, packaging, and UI/overlay-style graphics when you want a constructed, technical look rather than a neutral text face.
The carved-through inline detail and rounded-rect geometry evoke a retro-futurist, instrument-panel feel—somewhere between mid-century signage and sci‑fi interface typography. The overall tone is sleek and technical, with a slightly playful edge from the softened corners and modular construction.
Likely designed to deliver a bold, engineered display aesthetic by combining a rounded-rect geometric skeleton with an internal inline carve that adds depth and visual interest while keeping the stroke system simple and consistent.
The inline cut gives each stroke a layered, dimensional impression without adding contrast, and the consistent corner radius helps unify straight and curved forms. The design favors squared counters and compact apertures, which can make similar shapes feel intentionally systematized; this works best when the internal channel has enough pixel/print resolution to stay open.