Outline Deja 11 is a light, wide, high contrast, upright, tall x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, logos, posters, game ui, packaging, futuristic, techno, arcade, sci-fi, digital, tech aesthetic, sci-fi branding, ui labeling, retro futurism, rounded, monoline, inline, geometric, modular.
A geometric outline display face built from monoline contours with a consistent inline offset, producing a double-line/track-like stroke. Forms are squared-off with generously rounded corners, and many joins resolve into stepped, bracket-like turns rather than sharp angles. Counters are large and mostly rectangular, with open apertures in letters like C and G and a clean, engineered rhythm across curves and straight segments. The lowercase mirrors the uppercase’s modular construction, with a single-storey a and simplified, rectilinear bowls and stems; figures follow the same rounded-rectangle logic for a cohesive alphanumeric set.
Best suited to short display settings such as headlines, logotypes, posters, and title cards where its outlined construction can stay crisp. It also fits game/tech interfaces, product branding, and packaging accents that benefit from a futuristic, hardware-inspired look, especially on high-contrast backgrounds.
The overall tone is futuristic and UI-like, evoking sci‑fi control panels, arcade cabinets, and retro-digital hardware. Its hollow, double-contour construction reads as technical and schematic rather than literary, giving it a sleek, engineered personality with a playful edge.
The design appears intended as a contemporary techno display font: a modular, rounded-rectangle skeleton rendered as an outline with an inner track to suggest circuitry, tubing, or panel labeling. Its consistent geometry and simplified glyph construction prioritize visual identity and theme over conventional text readability.
The outline-and-inline structure creates strong interior negative spaces, so the design is most convincing at larger sizes where the track spacing and corner rounding remain distinct. Several diagonals (notably V/W/X and the 7) emphasize a segmented, constructed feel that reinforces the techno character.