Outline Budi 10 is a regular weight, normal width, high contrast, upright, tall x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, logos, sports, packaging, sporty, retro, arcade, bold, technical, impact, team branding, retro display, geometric construction, outline effect, octagonal, angular, monoline, outlined, blocky.
A geometric outline display face built from straight strokes and sharp, chamfered corners that produce an octagonal, sign-paint style silhouette. The strokes are drawn as clean outer contours with a consistent interior void, giving the letters a hollow, tubular feel. Curves are largely suppressed in favor of faceted turns, with squared counters and compact joins; the overall construction reads modular and engineered rather than calligraphic. Uppercase forms are broad-shouldered and blocky, while lowercase echoes the same faceted geometry, keeping bowls and terminals crisp and mechanical.
Best suited for display settings such as headlines, posters, team or event branding, and logo marks where the outlined construction can read clearly. It also works well for packaging, labels, and signage that benefits from a sporty, retro-technical voice, especially when paired with solid fills or contrasting backgrounds.
The faceted outlines and jersey-like proportions evoke athletic lettering, arcade-era graphics, and retro industrial signage. Its hollow construction feels punchy and energetic while staying orderly and technical, lending a playful but disciplined tone to headlines and identity work.
The design appears intended to translate the visual language of varsity/scoreboard and arcade-style block lettering into a clean outline system, emphasizing chamfered geometry and sturdy proportions. It aims to deliver impact through silhouette and negative space rather than heavy stroke weight, making it a distinctive choice for bold, graphic typography.
The outline treatment creates strong figure/ground interplay, but the thin interior space means readability depends heavily on size and background contrast. The squared counters and chamfered corners give the numerals and capitals a uniform, emblem-like rhythm that feels suited to badges and titles.