Pixel Dash Abmo 2 is a regular weight, wide, high contrast, italic, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, sports branding, gaming ui, tech promos, fast, techy, futuristic, glitchy, sporty, convey speed, create motion effect, add glitch texture, tech aesthetic, slanted, segmented, stencil-like, striped, angular.
A slanted display face built from segmented horizontal bars that break the strokes into rhythmic dashes, producing a scanline/striped texture across each glyph. Letterforms are wide and forward-leaning with squared curves, sharp terminals, and a slightly aerodynamic, cut-corner geometry. The contrast comes from alternating thick filled bands and thin gaps, which creates strong horizontal motion and a distinctly mechanical cadence. Spacing appears fairly open, and the segmented construction makes counters and joins feel intentionally perforated rather than continuous.
Best suited for display applications where texture and motion are desirable: headlines, posters, esports or motorsport-inspired branding, product promos, and UI accents in games or tech interfaces. It works well on dark/light high-contrast backgrounds and in short phrases where the segmented striping can be appreciated without overwhelming legibility.
The overall tone is energetic and speed-oriented, evoking racing graphics, digital interference, and sci‑fi instrumentation. Its striped fragmentation reads as motion blur or signal distortion, giving it a modern, high-adrenaline character that feels at home in tech and action contexts.
The design appears intended to merge an italic, speed-driven silhouette with a dashed, scanline-like construction to suggest motion and digital energy. The segmented bars function as a built-in graphic effect, turning even simple words into dynamic, futuristic marks.
Because the strokes are interrupted by repeated gaps, readability can drop at small sizes or in dense paragraphs; the texture becomes a dominant visual feature. The italic slant and horizontal segmentation amplify a sense of directionality, making the font particularly effective when used in short bursts or large headlines.