Pixel Dash Leba 1 is a very light, wide, monoline, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, ui labels, game graphics, tech branding, digital, retro, technical, futuristic, glitchy, evoke display type, create texture, signal technology, retro computing, segmented, dashed, modular, pixel-grid, geometric.
A modular, segmented display style built from short horizontal dashes and small square dots aligned to a pixel grid. Strokes are discontinuous, leaving consistent gaps that create a striped, scanline rhythm across curves and straight stems alike. Corners resolve as stepped, blocky turns rather than smooth arcs, and counters are kept open by the broken construction. Spacing and widths vary by character, giving the alphabet an uneven, device-like cadence while maintaining a consistent bar thickness and grid alignment.
Works well for headlines, short UI labels, and display settings where a digital/segmented texture is desirable. It’s suited to posters, album/film titling, game interfaces, and technology-themed branding where the distinctive dash rhythm can become a graphic element as much as a text voice.
The overall tone feels like an electronic readout—part retro terminal, part sci‑fi instrumentation. The broken bars and dotted joins suggest signal, transmission, or low-resolution rendering, giving the text a purposeful “coded” character that reads as technical and slightly glitchy.
Likely designed to evoke segmented electronic typography while staying strictly grid-based, using broken horizontal bars to create a recognizable alphabet with strong texture. The emphasis appears to be on atmosphere and display impact rather than continuous-stroke readability in long text.
Legibility is strongest at larger sizes where the dash pattern is clearly resolved; at smaller sizes the intentional gaps can visually merge into noise. The font’s signature comes from its repeated horizontal banding, which produces strong texture in paragraphs and makes repeated letters feel animated, like a scrolling display.