Outline Lafi 3 is a bold, very wide, monoline, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: logos, headlines, posters, game ui, packaging, techno, retro, arcade, geometric, futuristic, digital feel, retro futurism, display impact, systematic geometry, squared, angular, modular, inline, boxy.
A geometric outline display face built from squared, right-angled contours with consistent stroke thickness and generous interior counters. Letterforms are highly rectilinear, often constructed as nested rectangular paths that create an inline-like, double-track effect, producing a strong hollow presence. Curves are largely avoided in favor of chamferless corners and stepped joins, giving the alphabet a modular, grid-driven rhythm. Spacing appears fairly open for an outline design, while the overall silhouette remains wide and low-contrast, with simplified terminals and uniform cap height and x-height behavior.
Best used for logos, titles, and short headlines where its geometric outline structure can be appreciated at larger sizes. It also fits interface-style graphics such as game menus, sci‑fi overlays, tech event branding, and packaging or labels that benefit from a bold, engineered display look.
The tone is distinctly digital and game-adjacent, evoking arcade UI, sci‑fi panels, and circuit-like signage. Its crisp squared geometry reads as engineered and synthetic, with a playful retro-futurist edge that feels suited to technology and entertainment contexts rather than traditional editorial typography.
The design appears intended to translate a grid-based, digital aesthetic into a clean outline alphabet, prioritizing a strong geometric system and a distinctive hollow presence over text-face readability. The consistent rectilinear construction suggests a deliberate effort to create a cohesive, modular display font for futuristic and retro-tech themed typography.
The outline construction and nested contours make the glyphs visually dense in small sizes, but striking at larger settings where the interior shapes become a key part of the character. Several forms rely on rectangular counters and stepped apertures, reinforcing a consistent, modular system across uppercase, lowercase, and numerals.