Outline Liha 11 is a regular weight, normal width, medium contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: arcade titles, game ui, posters, logos, headlines, retro, arcade, techy, playful, geometric, retro computing, arcade styling, ui display, decorative outline, pixelated, inline, monoline, angular, blocky.
A geometric outline display face built from squared-off contours and stepped, pixel-like corners. Strokes are monoline in feel, drawn as a hollow perimeter with a consistent inset/inline detail that creates a layered, double-line effect in many glyphs. Curves are rendered as faceted segments, producing an 8-bit rhythm and crisp right-angle turns. Proportions are compact and modular, with mostly rectangular bowls and counters and a slightly mechanical, constructed geometry that stays consistent across capitals, lowercase, and numerals.
Best suited to display contexts where the outlined, pixel-stepped construction can be appreciated: game titles, arcade-inspired branding, posters, event flyers, and UI labels in retro tech themes. It also works well for short wordmarks, badges, and scoreboard-style numerals where the hollow structure adds personality without heavy fill.
The overall tone reads distinctly retro-digital, evoking arcade screens, early computer graphics, and schematic UI lettering. Its outlined construction keeps the color light while still feeling bold and attention-grabbing, with a playful, game-like energy. The pixel-stepped corners add a handcrafted, glitchy charm rather than a smooth modern precision.
The design intention appears to be a retro computer/arcade outline style that mimics low-resolution, grid-built lettering while remaining clean and systematic. By using hollow contours with an added inline, it aims to deliver a lighter typographic color than a solid pixel font, while keeping the unmistakable 8-bit geometry and energetic texture.
The outline + inner line detail creates strong interior shapes that can shimmer or visually buzz at small sizes, especially in dense text. Letterforms remain legible in short bursts, but the decorative edging and stepped joins make it better suited to display use than long reading. Numerals match the same modular, squared construction for cohesive headline and score-style settings.