Slab Square Sipa 6 is a very bold, normal width, monoline, upright, normal x-height, monospaced font.
Keywords: posters, headlines, logotypes, packaging, signage, industrial, retro, arcade, mechanical, assertive, impact, retro tech, display clarity, mechanical tone, modular system, blocky, square, slabbed, stencil-like, modular.
A heavy, block-constructed slab serif with a strongly modular, square geometry. Strokes are consistently thick with crisp right-angle corners and flat, rectangular serifs that read as integrated extensions of the stems. Counters tend to be compact and often rectangular, with several glyphs showing notched or stepped interior cuts that reinforce a pixel-like rhythm. The overall texture is dense and uniform, with tight apertures and a highly regular, engineered feel across capitals, lowercase, and numerals.
Best suited to display settings where strong presence and a graphic, geometric texture are desired—such as posters, bold headings, brand marks, labels, and wayfinding-style signage. It performs especially well at medium to large sizes where the squared details and notches remain clear.
The font conveys a bold, utilitarian tone with clear retro-tech and arcade signage associations. Its squared, machined forms feel commanding and functional, trading softness for impact and a deliberate, constructed character.
The design appears intended to deliver maximum impact through a rigid, square-built slab structure, evoking engineered lettering and early digital or arcade-era aesthetics. Consistent stroke weight and modular detailing suggest a focus on uniformity and bold legibility in attention-grabbing contexts.
Lowercase forms echo the cap construction rather than traditional text serifs, helping maintain a consistent modular voice. Numerals are similarly squared and sturdy, with simple interior cutouts that keep them distinct at larger sizes while preserving the compact, blocky color.