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Free for Commercial Use

Pixel Dash Bapu 2 is a very light, wide, medium contrast, reverse italic, normal x-height font.

Keywords: posters, album art, titles, branding, gaming ui, glitchy, digital, edgy, tactical, experimental, texture-first, digital distress, display impact, motion-friendly, high contrast mood, broken, fragmented, stenciled, slanted, angular.


Free for commercial use
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A fragmented dash-built design where each glyph is constructed from short, disconnected bars and diagonal notches, leaving consistent gaps throughout the strokes. The letterforms read as a slanted sans with crisp, angular terminals and an overall forward-leaning stance, while curves are suggested through stepped, segmented arcs rather than continuous outlines. Counters are open and airy, and the stroke pattern creates a porous texture that thins the apparent weight, especially in smaller details. Overall spacing feels generous and the silhouettes stay legible despite the deliberate breakup of the strokes.

Best suited to display settings where the dash texture can be appreciated—headlines, posters, cover art, brand marks, and motion graphics. It can also work for short UI labels in tech or gaming contexts when set large enough and with ample tracking, but it’s less appropriate for long-form text due to the intentionally broken stroke construction.

The repeating dash texture gives the face a hacked, disrupted feel—like scanned lettering, signal interference, or distressed digital output. It reads technical and slightly aggressive, with a fast, kinetic slant that adds urgency. The overall tone is contemporary and experimental, suited to visuals that want to feel coded, covert, or deconstructed.

The design appears intended to fuse a clean, slanted sans structure with a deliberately interrupted stroke system, creating a cohesive “degraded signal” texture without losing recognizability. Its consistent dash rhythm suggests a focus on atmosphere and surface pattern as much as on traditional stroke continuity.

The texture is highly uniform across the alphabet, which helps word shapes hold together even though the strokes are discontinuous. At smaller sizes or low-resolution output the micro-gaps can visually merge or sparkle, so contrast and scale will strongly affect readability.

Letter — Basic Uppercase Latin
A
B
C
D
E
F
G
H
I
J
K
L
M
N
O
P
Q
R
S
T
U
V
W
X
Y
Z
Letter — Basic Lowercase Latin
a
b
c
d
e
f
g
h
i
j
k
l
m
n
o
p
q
r
s
t
u
v
w
x
y
z
Number — Decimal Digit
0
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
Letter — Extended Uppercase Latin
À
Á
Â
Ã
Ä
Å
Æ
Ç
È
É
Ê
Ë
Ì
Í
Î
Ï
Ñ
Ò
Ó
Ô
Õ
Ö
Ø
Ù
Ú
Û
Ü
Ý
Ć
Č
Đ
Ė
Ę
Ě
Ğ
Į
İ
Ľ
Ł
Ń
Ő
Œ
Ś
Ş
Š
Ū
Ű
Ų
Ŵ
Ŷ
Ÿ
Ź
Ž
Letter — Extended Lowercase Latin
ß
à
á
â
ã
ä
å
æ
ç
è
é
ê
ë
ì
í
î
ï
ñ
ò
ó
ô
õ
ö
ø
ù
ú
û
ü
ý
ÿ
ć
č
đ
ė
ę
ě
ğ
į
ı
ľ
ł
ń
ő
œ
ś
ş
š
ū
ű
ų
ŵ
ŷ
ź
ž
Letter — Superscript Latin
ª
º
Number — Superscript
¹
²
³
Number — Fraction
½
¼
¾
Punctuation
!
#
*
,
.
/
:
;
?
\
¡
·
¿
Punctuation — Quote
"
'
«
»
Punctuation — Parenthesis
(
)
[
]
{
}
Punctuation — Dash
-
_
Symbol
&
@
|
¦
§
©
®
°
Symbol — Currency
$
¢
£
¤
¥
Symbol — Math
%
+
<
=
>
~
¬
±
^
µ
×
÷
Diacritics
`
´
¯
¨
¸