Inline Fiko 9 is a regular weight, wide, low contrast, upright, tall x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, logos, packaging, ui display, futuristic, techno, sci‑fi, arcade, industrial, sci‑fi styling, technical feel, display impact, system coherence, rounded corners, monoline, double-line, geometric, modular.
A geometric, monoline display face built from squared forms with generously rounded corners. The letterforms read as solid outlines with a consistent inline channel running through the strokes, creating a crisp double-line effect and a stencil-like sense of construction. Curves are largely rectilinear and chamfered into radiused turns, with flat terminals and evenly weighted horizontals and verticals. Counters are compact and squarish, spacing is relatively open, and the lowercase shows a large x-height with simplified, modular shapes.
Best suited to short display settings where the inline carving can stay legible: headlines, event posters, tech branding, game titles, and packaging. It can also work for UI or on-screen labels when used at larger sizes with ample contrast against the background.
The inline cut and rounded-square geometry give the font a sleek, engineered attitude that feels futuristic and digital. Its rhythm suggests control panels, arcade marquees, and sci‑fi interfaces—cool, mechanical, and slightly retro-futurist rather than expressive or handwritten.
The design appears intended to merge a clean geometric skeleton with an inline engraving effect, producing a high-impact display face that signals technology and modernity while maintaining consistent, modular construction across the alphabet and numerals.
The inline detail is prominent at text sizes, so the design reads best when given enough scale to keep the interior channel clear. Many glyphs share repeated structural motifs (parallel strokes, squared bowls, and open apertures), reinforcing a cohesive, systemized look.