Pixel Dash Fiba 11 is a regular weight, very narrow, medium contrast, upright, short x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, titles, ui labels, tech branding, techno, industrial, retro, mechanical, glitchy, digital texture, display impact, retro tech, interface feel, segmented, monolinear, blocky, modular, high-contrast edges.
A condensed, segmented display face built from stacked horizontal dashes that read like quantized scanlines. Strokes are monolinear in concept but broken into discrete bars, producing stepped corners, clipped curves, and occasional asymmetric terminals. The overall structure is upright and tall, with compact counters and tight internal spacing; curves are suggested through staggered segments rather than continuous outlines. In text, the repeated dash rhythm creates a strong vertical cadence and a distinctly “striped” texture across words.
Best suited to headlines, titles, and short lines where the segmented texture is a feature rather than a distraction. It works well for sci‑fi or tech-themed UI labels, packaging accents, album/film titling, and event posters that benefit from a digital readout aesthetic.
The segmented construction and scanline texture evoke digital hardware readouts, industrial labeling, and retro-futurist interfaces. Its crisp, modular rhythm feels technical and mechanical, with a subtle glitchy edge that reads as intentionally electronic rather than rough.
The design appears intended to translate pixel/segment-display logic into a typographic system: maintaining recognizable letter skeletons while expressing them through repeated dash modules. The goal seems to be a distinctive, technology-coded voice that remains legible in display sizes and delivers a consistent scanline pattern across text.
The alphabet shows simplified, geometric forms where bowls and diagonals are implied through stepped segment placement, reinforcing a pixel-grid logic even at larger sizes. The strong patterning can visually dominate long passages, so the font’s personality comes through most clearly when set with generous tracking or used in short bursts.