Outline Ligu 7 is a light, normal width, low contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, game ui, album art, event flyers, retro tech, glitchy, arcade, industrial, playful, digital texture, glitch effect, retro styling, display impact, pixelated, monoline, outlined, boxy, angular.
This typeface is built from thin, monoline outlines that trace boxy, rectilinear letterforms. The contour is intentionally irregular: small stepped notches, pixel-like intrusions, and occasional “broken” corners create a jittery edge while maintaining clear underlying skeletons. Counters are open and airy, with squared terminals and a predominantly orthogonal construction that reads like vector outlines derived from a low-resolution grid. Spacing and glyph widths vary in a way that reinforces a hand-hacked, modular rhythm rather than strict geometric uniformity.
Best suited to display settings such as headlines, posters, game or app UI accents, and graphic identities that want a retro-computing or glitch aesthetic. It can work well for short phrases, titles, and wordmarks where the outlined silhouettes and jagged detailing have room to read clearly.
The overall tone feels like retro digital signage with a deliberate glitch artifact—part arcade UI, part DIY circuit-board labeling. Its outlined construction keeps it visually light, while the jagged edge behavior adds energy and a playful, corrupted-tech character that suggests motion, interference, or pixel decay.
The design appears intended to merge simple block-letter construction with a stylized, pixel-stepped distortion, creating an outlined display face that evokes digital artifacts and arcade-era visuals. Its primary goal seems to be adding texture and attitude to straightforward letterforms without sacrificing basic legibility.
In the sample text, the outline-only strokes emphasize interior whitespace, so the font’s character comes mostly from its outer silhouette and the stepped distortions. The effect is clearest at medium-to-large sizes, where the small notches read as intentional texture rather than noise.