Pixel Dash Leba 11 is a regular weight, very wide, low contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: display, posters, headlines, logotypes, titles, glitchy, techno, arcade, mechanical, coded, digital texture, signal motif, modular system, retro tech, segmented, modular, striped, stencil-like, quantized.
A modular, segmented design built from short horizontal bars that stack in evenly spaced rows. Strokes are discontinuous and quantized, with small gaps that create a striped, scanline texture across each letterform. The geometry is predominantly rectangular with squared terminals and minimal curvature, producing crisp edges and a grid-driven rhythm. Counters are implied by missing segments rather than continuous outlines, and spacing feels open and airy at text sizes due to the repeated internal breaks.
Best suited to display typography where the segmented texture can be appreciated—posters, headlines, title cards, and tech-forward branding. It can also work for short UI labels or on-screen graphics when set with generous size and spacing.
The overall tone reads digital and signal-like, evoking terminal graphics, LED/segment displays, and glitch aesthetics. Its broken-bar construction adds a coded, engineered character that feels futuristic and game-adjacent while remaining clean and systematic.
The design appears intended to translate pixel-grid logic into bold, dash-based letterforms that preserve recognizable silhouettes while foregrounding a scanline/segmented effect. It prioritizes a distinctive digital texture and rhythmic modularity over continuous stroke flow.
The internal striping is highly consistent across uppercase, lowercase, and numerals, giving text a strong horizontal cadence. Because the forms rely on separated fragments, legibility can soften at smaller sizes or in dense paragraphs, while larger settings emphasize the distinctive segmented texture.