Outline Lyve 2 is a regular weight, wide, monoline, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, logos, posters, gaming, ui display, futuristic, tech, arcade, modular, neon, sci-fi display, retro tech, signage feel, digital branding, rounded corners, geometric, outlined, open counters, low contrast.
This typeface is built from a clean, geometric skeleton rendered as a double-line outline, creating a consistent hollow interior throughout. Strokes follow squared paths with generously rounded corners, producing a soft-rectilinear feel rather than sharp angles. Curves are simplified into boxy rounds (notably in C, O, and G), and terminals tend to be flat and horizontal/vertical, reinforcing a constructed, modular rhythm. Counters and apertures are kept open and spacious, supporting clarity even with the hollow construction, while the overall letterforms read broadly proportioned with steady spacing and a crisp, uniform contour.
Best suited to display sizes where the double-outline detailing can be appreciated—headlines, poster titles, game branding, and event or club graphics. It can also work for UI labels, dashboards, and tech-themed packaging when set with adequate size and spacing so the hollow strokes stay distinct.
The outlined, tube-like construction evokes retro-futurist signage and classic arcade or sci‑fi UI aesthetics. Its rounded-square geometry feels engineered and playful at the same time, suggesting a synthetic, digital voice rather than a traditional print tone. The consistent hollow inline effect adds a display-forward, illuminated impression reminiscent of neon or traced circuitry.
The design appears intended to deliver a constructed, retro-tech display voice by combining rounded-square geometry with a consistent outlined stroke system. The emphasis is on strong silhouette recognition and a neon/trace effect that reads quickly while adding decorative character.
The cap set maintains a strong grid logic with squared bowls and rectangular interior shapes (e.g., D, O, P), while diagonals are simplified into sturdy joins (K, X, Y) that retain the same corner radius. Numerals follow the same modular language, with an especially geometric 0 and segmented-feeling 2 and 3 that suit interface and titling contexts.