Slab Square Pohy 6 is a bold, normal width, monoline, upright, normal x-height font visually similar to 'Miura Slab' by DSType, 'Athletico' and 'Athletico Clean' by GRIN3 (Nowak), 'Field House' by Komet & Flicker, 'Centima Pro' by TipografiaRamis, and 'Hockeynight Serif' by XTOPH (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: sports branding, posters, headlines, signage, packaging, collegiate, industrial, authoritative, vintage, rugged, impact, durability, branding, legibility, retro feel, blocky, octagonal, squared, high-contrast shapes, poster-ready.
A heavy, block-constructed slab serif with monoline strokes and crisp, squared-off terminals. Many curves are simplified into chamfered, octagonal forms, giving round letters like O, C, and G a faceted geometry. Serifs are broad and rectangular, with sturdy brackets minimized in favor of straight, mechanical joins. Counters are compact and largely rectangular, and overall spacing feels firm and even, producing a dense, sign-like rhythm in text.
Well suited to sports and collegiate branding, team or club marks, posters, and bold editorial headlines where its slabbed, faceted construction reads quickly. It also fits rugged product packaging and straightforward signage that needs a sturdy, high-impact voice.
The tone is collegiate and workmanlike, mixing athletic-lettering familiarity with an industrial, no-nonsense presence. Its faceted corners and thick slabs read as confident and slightly retro, suggesting durability and straightforward impact rather than delicacy or warmth.
The design appears intended to deliver a tough, highly legible slab-serif look built from simple, repeatable geometric decisions—square ends, broad slabs, and consistent chamfers—so it holds together as a coherent, attention-grabbing display face.
Distinctive chamfering appears consistently across capitals, lowercase, and numerals, helping the design feel unified at display sizes. The numerals are equally blocky and emblematic, with the 0 and 8 particularly showing the same octagonal logic as the uppercase rounds. In continuous text the strong verticals and short interior spaces create a dark color, so it benefits from generous sizing or comfortable line spacing.