Pixel Ehsi 14 is a regular weight, normal width, low contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: pixel art, game ui, retro titles, hud text, menus, retro, arcade, techy, digital, bitmap emulation, screen legibility, retro computing, ui clarity, blocky, modular, grid-fit, angular, monoline.
A crisp, grid-fit pixel typeface built from square modules with monoline strokes and hard right-angle corners. Letterforms favor compact, rectangular counters and stepped diagonals, creating a distinctly quantized silhouette in shapes like K, R, X, and the numerals. Spacing and proportions feel utilitarian and screen-oriented, with straightforward punctuation and a consistent, no-frills construction that stays legible at small sizes.
Well suited to pixel-art projects, retro game branding, and UI elements such as menus, dialogs, and in-game overlays where grid alignment is part of the aesthetic. It also works for short headlines, posters, or labels that want an unmistakably bitmap, screen-era texture.
The overall tone is nostalgic and functional, evoking classic console and early computer graphics. Its rigid geometry and chunky pixel rhythm read as technical and game-like, suggesting interfaces, scoreboards, and HUD text rather than editorial typography.
The design appears intended to emulate classic bitmap lettering with clean, modular construction and dependable readability on a pixel grid. Its simplified geometry prioritizes consistent rhythm and a recognizable retro-computing voice across letters and numerals.
Curves are generally implied through stair-stepped edges, giving rounded characters a squared-off appearance. The lowercase closely follows the uppercase’s modular logic, reinforcing a uniform, system-font feel across mixed-case text.