Outline Syjo 10 is a regular weight, normal width, low contrast, upright, tall x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, logos, game ui, packaging, retro, arcade, tech, architectural, edgy, 3d effect, retro tech, display impact, geometric system, angular, geometric, faceted, chamfered, monoline outline.
A geometric outline display with chamfered corners and a faceted, pseudo‑3D construction. Letters are built from straight segments with consistent stroke outlining and internal cut lines that suggest beveled planes rather than filled strokes. The forms lean squarish and condensed in their counters, with sharp terminals, tight apertures, and a generally uniform outline thickness. Curves are largely avoided in favor of angled joints, giving both capitals and lowercase a mechanical, constructed rhythm; spacing and sidebearings vary with the blocky silhouettes, reinforcing a sign-like, modular feel.
Best suited for short, high-impact settings such as posters, titles, logos, esports/game branding, and stylized UI labels where the faceted outline can be appreciated. It can also work for packaging or event graphics that want a retro-tech, constructed aesthetic, but it is less appropriate for long passages or small body text due to the intricate interior cuts.
The font reads as retro-futurist and arcade-adjacent, with a technical, industrial edge. Its wireframe/engraved look feels energetic and game-like, while the chiseled facets add an architectural, hard-surface tone.
Likely designed as a decorative outline face that mimics beveled, carved, or isometric letterforms while staying in an upright, geometric system. The goal appears to be maximum character and texture through angular facets and consistent outline rules, creating a bold display voice without using filled strokes.
The pseudo-extruded interior detailing increases visual activity, especially in complex glyphs like S, G, R, and numerals, so it benefits from generous tracking and moderate sizes. The outline-only construction makes it strongest on light backgrounds or when paired with a solid fill/underlay treatment in graphics workflows.