Pixel Okma 2 is a bold, normal width, medium contrast, upright, tall x-height, monospaced font visually similar to 'Foxley 916' by MiniFonts.com (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: game ui, pixel art, retro branding, headlines, posters, retro, arcade, techy, utilitarian, playful, screen legibility, retro computing, ui utility, grid consistency, blocky, chunky, grid-fit, stair-stepped, crisp.
A grid-fit pixel face with chunky, staircase contours and mostly right-angled construction. Strokes sit on a tight modular grid with abrupt corners, squared terminals, and compact counters, producing dense, high-ink letterforms. Capitals are rigid and geometric while lowercase retains a simplified, bitmap-like structure with single-storey forms and minimal curvature; punctuation and numerals follow the same block-built logic for a consistent rhythm.
Well suited to game interfaces, scoreboards, menus, and pixel-art adjacent graphics where hard grid alignment is desirable. It also works for retro-themed headlines, posters, stickers, and branding accents that want a classic digital/arcade voice.
The overall tone is unmistakably retro-digital, evoking classic game UI, early computer terminals, and 8-bit hardware. Its blunt shapes and tight spacing feel functional and technical, but the pixel stepping adds a friendly, playful character.
The design appears intended to translate bitmap-era letterforms into a consistent, grid-bound alphabet that stays visually solid and legible in screen-centric contexts. It prioritizes uniform modular construction and strong silhouette recognition over smooth curves or delicate detail.
Diagonal and curved features are rendered through stepped pixel ramps, creating intentional jaggedness that reads cleanly at display sizes. The heavy pixel mass and small counters can cause some characters to feel similar at small sizes, favoring short bursts of text over long reading.