Groovy Vihi 2 is a bold, normal width, medium contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, logotypes, posters, packaging, game ui, retro-futurist, playful, techy, quirky, space-age, distinctive display, retro flavor, futurist tone, graphic texture, playful impact, rounded, modular, geometric, stencil-like, soft corners.
A rounded, modular display face built from thick, monoline strokes with generously radiused corners and frequent open counters. Many glyphs suggest a pseudo-stencil construction, using deliberate gaps and cut-ins that create a segmented rhythm without feeling jagged. Curves are squared-off into soft rectangles, and terminals often end in blunt, rounded caps, producing a consistent, tile-like texture across words. The overall silhouette stays compact and blocky, with distinctive negative-space notches that make letters feel engineered rather than calligraphic.
Best used in short, prominent settings such as headlines, poster titles, album/event graphics, and brand marks where its geometric quirks can be appreciated. It can also work for game or sci‑fi themed UI labels and packaging callouts, especially when set large with ample tracking. For longer passages, it’s more effective as an accent font paired with a simpler text face.
The font reads as retro-futurist and playful, blending space-age geometry with a groovy, toy-like friendliness. Its cut-out details add a quirky, game/UI energy, while the rounded rectangles keep it approachable rather than harsh. The result feels suited to imaginative, pop-culture-forward design where personality is more important than neutrality.
The design appears intended to deliver a distinctive, era-evoking display voice using rounded-rectangular construction and stencil-like openings to create instant stylistic signature. Its consistent geometry and deliberate gaps aim to produce a recognizable word-shape texture that feels both nostalgic and futuristic.
The segmented openings create strong internal patterns, so spacing and line breaks become part of the visual effect—text forms a cohesive, graphic texture. Several characters rely on distinctive cut-ins for differentiation, which heightens novelty but can reduce instant recognizability at small sizes.