Inline Fivu 2 is a bold, wide, low contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, logos, gaming, ui titles, techno, sci‑fi, arcade, industrial, futuristic, futurism, impact, dimensionality, modularity, branding, geometric, angular, monolinear, beveled, outlined.
A geometric, angular display face built from squared, monolinear strokes with clipped corners and a continuous inline channel running through each letterform. The proportions skew broad with generous horizontal spans and tight, rectangular counters, producing a compact, engineered rhythm. Stems and terminals are mostly straight and orthogonal, with occasional chamfered joins and stepped details (notably in curves like S and G) that emphasize a modular, constructed feel. Numerals and capitals share consistent stroke framing and interior cut structure, keeping the set visually uniform in blocks of text.
Best suited to display settings such as headlines, posters, branding marks, esports/gaming graphics, and interface titles where the inline detailing can read clearly. It works especially well on high-contrast backgrounds and in short phrases, where its engineered shapes and interior channels become a defining visual hook.
The inline carving and squared geometry evoke a futuristic, techno-utility tone reminiscent of arcade graphics, industrial labeling, and sci‑fi interfaces. Its sharp corners and mechanical cadence feel assertive and synthetic rather than humanist or calligraphic.
The design appears intended to deliver a bold, high-impact techno aesthetic by combining broad geometric letterforms with a consistent inline cut that adds depth and dimensionality without relying on shading. Its disciplined, modular construction suggests a focus on futuristic identity work and attention-grabbing titling rather than long-form text.
The inline gap stays fairly even in width, reading as a deliberate channel rather than a light stroke, and it creates strong figure/ground contrast even when the overall forms are open and airy. The design favors rectangular counters and crisp corners, which gives it a clean, architectural silhouette but can make small sizes feel busy where multiple internal lines stack tightly.