Font Hero

Free for Commercial Use

Pixel Orry 4 is a bold, normal width, medium contrast, upright, normal x-height, monospaced font.

Keywords: game ui, pixel art, retro branding, posters, titles, retro, arcade, 8-bit, playful, techy, retro emulation, screen display, digital texture, high impact, blocky, chunky, stepped, square, high-impact.


Free for commercial use
Customize the font name

A chunky bitmap-style design built from square pixel steps, with heavily simplified geometry and clearly quantized curves. Strokes are consistently thick with hard corners and occasional stair-stepped diagonals, giving counters and bowls a squared, modular feel. The glyphs sit on a steady baseline and maintain a uniform set width, producing an even, gridlike rhythm in text. Uppercase forms are compact and angular, while lowercase shows similarly blocky construction with small, pixel-defined details (such as dots and terminals) that keep shapes legible at display sizes.

Best suited for retro game UI, pixel-art projects, title screens, and display typography where a bitmap texture is part of the concept. It also works well for posters, event graphics, and packaging accents aiming for an arcade or vintage-computing feel, especially when used with ample spacing and high-contrast color palettes.

The overall tone evokes classic computer and console-era graphics: energetic, nostalgic, and game-like. Its pixel grid texture reads as intentionally digital and slightly rugged, suggesting terminals, HUDs, and retro interfaces rather than polished print typography.

The design appears intended to reproduce a classic low-resolution bitmap lettering look with consistent grid discipline and strong, readable silhouettes. It prioritizes bold presence and nostalgic digital character over fine typographic nuance, making the pixel structure a primary visual feature.

The face relies on distinctive stepped curves for letters like C, G, O, and S, and uses strong rectangular counters that hold up well when rendered large. At smaller sizes, the tight pixel features and dense weight can merge, so it visually favors headline and UI-label scales where the block structure remains crisp.

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
`
´
¯
¨
¸