Pixel Other Ubmo 2 is a regular weight, normal width, high contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: posters, headlines, album covers, game ui, event flyers, glitchy, industrial, rugged, tactical, noisy, add texture, signal grit, create disruption, display impact, stencil-like, fragmented, distressed, chipped, broken.
A bold, all-caps-forward sans construction whose letterforms are repeatedly interrupted by horizontal breaks, producing a segmented, stencil-like texture across every glyph. The overall geometry stays simple and upright with mostly straight stems and compact curves, while the internal voids and crossbars are visually “cut” into short bands that vary from glyph to glyph. Counters remain clear enough to read, but the repeated striping creates strong figure/ground flicker, especially in rounded letters and numerals. Spacing feels steady in text, with the distressed pattern providing most of the rhythm rather than stroke modulation.
Best suited for display settings where texture is an asset: posters, cover art, gaming/tech visuals, or punchy editorial headers. It can work for short UI labels or title treatments when set large enough for the internal cuts to remain distinct, and it’s less suited to long-form reading where the striping can become visually fatiguing.
The repeated slicing gives the type a hacked, eroded character—equal parts utilitarian and disruptive. It reads like worn industrial marking, camo-striping, or a corrupted print, conveying tension and energy while staying recognizable.
The design appears intended to deliver a clean, sturdy skeleton overlaid with a deliberate banded “break” effect, creating a controlled distressed look that stays readable while signaling grit and disruption.
The fragmentation is consistent across uppercase, lowercase, and numerals, making it feel like a systematic effect rather than random grunge. At smaller sizes the striping can merge into texture, so legibility depends on scale and contrast.