Inline Fiwy 7 is a regular weight, very wide, medium contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, logos, posters, game titles, sci-fi branding, futuristic, techy, sci-fi, arcade, mechanical, display impact, tech aesthetic, signage clarity, stylized geometry, modern retro, geometric, modular, outlined, multi-line, rounded corners.
This is a geometric sans with very wide proportions and squared, rounded-corner forms throughout. Strokes are built as an outline with a narrow internal inline track that creates a layered, circuit-like contour; corners often step or notch, emphasizing a constructed, modular feel. Curves are restrained and mostly squarish, with consistent radii, flat terminals, and occasional angular joins that add a sharp, techno rhythm across words. The overall texture is open and airy due to the hollow structure, but the double/inline contours keep it visually dense at larger sizes.
Best suited for headlines, logos, posters, game titles, and sci‑fi/technology themed branding where the inline outline can read cleanly and feel intentional. It can also work for signage-style wordmarks and UI/title treatments at medium-to-large sizes; for long passages or small text, the hollow multi-contour detailing may become busy and reduce legibility.
The font conveys a futuristic, technical mood with a hint of retro arcade and sci‑fi signage energy. Its outlined, multi-line construction feels engineered and slightly ornamental, giving text a display-forward presence rather than a quiet, neutral tone. Overall it reads as bold, mechanical, and attention-seeking.
The design appears intended to deliver a strong techno-display voice using wide, geometric skeletons and an engineered inline/outline construction. The stepped corners and squared curves suggest a deliberately synthetic, digital-industrial look, prioritizing distinctive silhouette and theme over conventional text neutrality.
The sample text shows consistent spacing and a steady baseline, with a notably wide set that gives words a stretched, panoramic feel. Numerals and uppercase carry strong rectangular structure, while lowercase maintains the same squared, rounded-corner logic, helping mixed-case settings remain cohesive.