Solid Boby 4 is a regular weight, normal width, medium contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, logotypes, game ui, sci-fi titles, futuristic, techy, industrial, game-like, mechanical, sci-fi styling, system design, attention grabbing, interface mimicry, octagonal, chamfered, geometric, modular, angular.
A modular, geometric display face built from straight strokes and chamfered corners, often resolving curves into octagonal-like facets. Many glyphs alternate between outlined skeleton forms and heavy, filled-in counters, creating a distinctive rhythm of solids and open linear shapes across words. Strokes are generally uniform with crisp terminals, and proportions feel engineered rather than calligraphic, with simplified bowls and squared-off joins that emphasize a constructed, stencil-like logic.
Best suited for short display settings such as headlines, title cards, posters, branding marks, and UI elements in games or tech-themed projects. It can also work for signage-style labels or packaging accents where a mechanical, engineered voice is desired, but is less appropriate for long-form text due to its intermittent solid counters and unconventional letterforms.
The overall tone is futuristic and machine-made, evoking digital readouts, sci‑fi interfaces, and industrial labeling. The mix of thin linear letters with occasional bold, solid forms adds a slightly glitchy, coded feel that reads as experimental and attention-grabbing rather than neutral.
The design appears intended to translate a futuristic, polygonal construction into a readable alphabet, prioritizing silhouette and system-like consistency over traditional typographic detailing. By combining skeletal outlines with occasional solid, counterless forms, it aims to create a distinctive visual cadence that feels digital and industrial.
Legibility varies by letter because counters are sometimes collapsed into solid masses and some forms are highly simplified; this makes it most effective at larger sizes where the faceted silhouettes are easy to recognize. Numerals follow the same angular, chamfered construction, reinforcing a cohesive, techno-system aesthetic.