Inline Tuje 7 is a very bold, wide, very high contrast, italic, normal x-height font.
Keywords: sports branding, racing titles, game ui, posters, logos, racing, aggressive, arcade, tech, action, impact, speed, futurism, branding, display, slanted, angular, chiseled, outlined, geometric.
A sharply slanted, blocky display face built from hard-edged, geometric forms with pronounced diagonals and clipped corners. The letterforms are heavy and compact with a wide stance, then energized by a carved inline highlight that slices through many strokes, creating a fast, mechanical rhythm. Shapes are mostly closed and rectangular, with occasional notches and stepped terminals; counters are tight and squared, and several glyphs show asymmetric cuts that enhance motion. A thin outline reinforces the silhouette, helping separate the dense black mass from the background while keeping the overall texture punchy and graphic.
Best suited to short, high-impact settings where the outline and inline cuts can read clearly: sports and racing identities, esports or arcade-inspired branding, video-game titles and menus, posters, and bold packaging callouts. It can work for headings and subheads, especially when generous tracking and size allow the internal carving to remain legible.
The tone reads like speed and impact: motorsport graphics, arcade cabinets, and action-title typography. The italic slant and internal cut lines suggest momentum and engineered precision, giving the font a combative, high-adrenaline feel rather than a calm or literary one.
The design appears intended to deliver a fast, industrial display voice by combining a slanted, wide block construction with inline cut-outs and an outline that amplifies the silhouette. The goal seems to be immediate attention and a sense of motion, with engineered detailing that evokes speed-stripe graphics and stylized machinery.
The inline carving is used as a consistent motif across caps, lowercase, and numerals, sometimes appearing as short streaks and sometimes as longer channels, which adds a deliberate "machined" effect. The overall color is very dark at text sizes, so the inline and outline details contribute most strongly when set large or with ample contrast.