Inline Mivu 3 is a very bold, normal width, medium contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, logotypes, game ui, album covers, techno, arcade, futuristic, industrial, sci-fi, impact, tech flavor, retro digital, branding, display texture, geometric, rectilinear, angular, stencil-like, modular.
A rectilinear, geometric display face built from heavy, squared strokes with sharply cut corners and mostly right-angle joins. An internal inline channel (a narrow white track) runs through many stems and bowls, creating a crisp, machined “carved” look and adding rhythm inside the otherwise blocky silhouettes. Curves are minimized or squared-off, counters are compact, and terminals tend to end bluntly, giving letters a modular, constructed feel. Spacing and widths vary by glyph, while overall cap height and x-height read steady in text.
Best suited for display applications where its inline carving and chunky geometry can remain crisp: headlines, posters, titles, logotypes, packaging accents, and entertainment-oriented graphics such as game UI or arcade-inspired branding. It can also work for short pull quotes or labels where a bold, technical flavor is desired.
The inline cut and boxy construction give the font a retro-digital and industrial tone—equal parts arcade signage and sci‑fi interface. It feels precise, engineered, and a bit aggressive, with a confident, high-impact presence suited to bold statements rather than quiet reading.
The design appears intended to merge a heavy geometric skeleton with an internal engraved line, producing a dimensional, fabricated look reminiscent of cut metal, neon-channel lettering, or pixel-adjacent arcade typography. Its purpose is to deliver strong visual identity and a distinctive texture in large-format type.
The inline detail introduces a strong secondary pattern that becomes more pronounced at larger sizes; at smaller sizes the interior channel may visually close up, so the design reads best when given room. The squared forms and narrow internal gaps create a distinctive texture across lines, especially in mixed-case settings and numerals.