Pixel Ehba 5 is a regular weight, normal width, high contrast, upright, normal x-height font visually similar to 'New Geneva Nine' by NicePrice Font Collection and 'Megapixel' by Umka Type (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: pixel ui, game ui, hud, arcade titles, scoreboards, retro, arcade, technical, utilitarian, digital, retro computing, low-res clarity, ui readability, pixel aesthetic, blocky, quantized, grid-fit, modular, monolinear.
A grid-fit bitmap face built from square pixels with crisp, stepped contours and hard corners throughout. Strokes are largely monolinear but exhibit jagged diagonals and stair-stepped curves, producing a lively, faceted edge. Proportions are compact and geometric, with squared bowls and counters and simple, angular joins; several forms rely on open apertures and clipped terminals to stay legible at low resolution. Numerals and capitals read sturdy and schematic, while lowercase maintains a straightforward, functional construction that stays consistent with the pixel grid.
Well-suited to pixel-art interfaces, retro game menus, HUD overlays, and scoreboard-style readouts where the grid-fit construction supports clarity at small sizes. It also works effectively for headings, labels, and short blocks of text that aim to signal a nostalgic digital or hardware-display aesthetic.
The overall tone is unmistakably retro-digital, evoking classic arcade screens, early personal computing, and embedded displays. Its pixel cadence and crisp modularity feel technical and game-like, with a pragmatic, no-nonsense character.
The design appears intended to reproduce the feel of classic low-resolution bitmap typography while remaining readable in continuous text. Its modular construction prioritizes grid conformity and consistent rhythm, balancing compact geometry with simplified, legible silhouettes.
Spacing appears tuned for bitmap clarity, with clear cell-based rhythm and ample separation between letters in running text. Diagonals (e.g., in K, V, W, X, Y) are rendered with coarse step patterns, and curved letters (C, G, S, O, Q) use squared-off rounding that emphasizes the underlying grid.