Inline Yewa 2 is a bold, very wide, medium contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, logos, posters, packaging, gaming ui, futuristic, techno, sporty, retro sci‑fi, industrial, distinctive display, tech branding, sci‑fi styling, alphanumeric clarity, rounded, monoline, inline, modular, geometric.
A geometric sans with broad proportions, rounded corners, and a consistent monoline construction. Strokes are rendered as a dark outline with a narrow inline cut running through them, creating a clean, hollowed channel that tracks the letterforms. Counters tend toward squarish bowls, terminals are mostly flat and squared off, and joins are smooth with soft radii rather than sharp vertices. The overall rhythm is steady and mechanical, with generous width and compact interior openings that keep the silhouette strong at display sizes.
Best suited to display settings where the inline channel can be appreciated: headlines, posters, album or event graphics, branding marks, packaging, and on-screen UI elements for games or tech products. It can work for short paragraphs in large sizes, but the inline cut and tight counters suggest avoiding small body text where interior detail may soften.
The inline carving and rounded, squared geometry give the face a futuristic, engineered feel—like control-panel lettering or product branding for tech and performance gear. It reads as confident and high-impact, with a sleek, synthetic tone that nods to late-20th-century sci‑fi and contemporary esports aesthetics.
The design appears intended to deliver a bold, high-tech presence through wide, rounded-square forms while adding distinctiveness via an inline cut that reads like engraving or neon tubing. The emphasis is on strong silhouettes, consistent geometry, and a streamlined, modern texture for impactful display typography.
The inline detail is fine enough that it becomes a secondary texture in longer text blocks, while the outer silhouette remains the primary read. Numerals and capitals share the same squared-round architecture, helping mixed alphanumeric strings look cohesive and system-like.