Pixel Beri 1 is a regular weight, normal width, medium contrast, italic, tall x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, game ui, tech branding, album art, retro tech, glitchy, industrial, arcade, sci‑fi, retro digital, ui labeling, glitch texture, motion emphasis, rounded corners, stencil breaks, monoline, oblique, segmented.
A segmented, pixel-informed display face with an oblique slant and monoline strokes. Letterforms are built from chunky, blocklike segments with rounded outer corners and frequent small breaks or notches that create a stencil-like, glitchy texture. Curves are simplified into stepped arcs, counters are compact and angular, and terminals often end in softened squares rather than sharp points. Proportions skew tall with a lively, uneven rhythm caused by variable widths and irregular internal cut-ins across the set.
Best suited to short-form display settings—headlines, posters, title cards, and on-screen UI—where its segmented, pixel-leaning construction can read as a deliberate stylistic cue. It also fits tech- and sci‑fi-adjacent branding, game interfaces, and music/entertainment graphics that benefit from a retro-digital accent.
The overall tone reads as retro-digital and engineered, evoking arcade screens, instrument panels, and sci‑fi UI labeling. The intentional interruptions in strokes add a hacked, distressed edge that feels energetic and slightly abrasive rather than cleanly geometric.
The font appears designed to translate classic bitmap/arcade letter logic into a more fluid, rounded-segment style while adding deliberate breaks for a glitch/stencil effect. The oblique slant and variable widths emphasize motion and personality, prioritizing character over neutral readability.
In text, the oblique angle and segmented construction produce a strong forward motion, while the frequent notches can reduce clarity at small sizes. The design is most convincing when allowed generous size and spacing so the internal breaks and rounded block geometry remain legible.