Solid Tyba 11 is a very bold, wide, low contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: posters, headlines, logos, packaging, game ui, industrial, arcade, stencil-like, brutalist, playful, maximum impact, solid counters, retro display, modular geometry, texture-first, angular, faceted, blocky, geometric, notched.
A heavy, block-built display face with faceted geometry and frequent clipped corners that create octagonal silhouettes. Counters are largely collapsed into solid masses, with recognition driven by cut-in notches, narrow slits, and stepped bite marks rather than open bowls. Strokes are monolinear and rectilinear overall, but the recurring chamfers and inset cuts add a rhythmic, mechanical texture across words. Spacing and widths feel intentionally irregular, contributing to a chunky, modular cadence in setting.
Best suited to display settings such as posters, album art, product packaging, and logo marks where strong silhouette recognition and a bold graphic texture are desirable. It also fits game UI, titles, and on-screen graphics that benefit from a chunky, arcade-industrial voice.
The letterforms read as tough and machine-made, with a hint of arcade signage and industrial labeling. Its solid interiors and sharp chamfers give it a bold, poster-like presence that feels assertive, slightly retro, and intentionally quirky.
The design appears intended to reinterpret a heavy geometric sans into a solid, counterless system, using chamfers and carved notches as the primary distinguishing devices. The result prioritizes impact and a distinctive texture over conventional readability, aiming for a memorable, emblematic look.
Many characters rely on small internal cuts to differentiate shapes (notably in letters like E/G and several lowercase forms), so the font’s identity strengthens at medium-to-large sizes where those notches remain clear. The uppercase and lowercase share the same cut-corner vocabulary, keeping the overall texture consistent even though the lowercase is simplified and compact.