Pixel Ehfa 2 is a regular weight, wide, high contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: pixel ui, game ui, retro titles, scoreboards, posters, retro, arcade, 8-bit, tech, playful, screen authenticity, retro computing, compact legibility, pixel texture, blocky, modular, grid-fit, sharp, crisp.
A block-constructed pixel font with chunky, square modules and stepped corners throughout. Strokes are built from small rectangular pixels, producing crisp diagonals via stair-stepping and occasional single-pixel protrusions that add character. Counters tend to be compact and angular, with simplified interior spaces that keep forms bold and readable at small sizes. Overall proportions feel generously spaced horizontally, with straightforward verticals and a consistent grid rhythm that emphasizes the bitmap structure.
Well suited to pixel-art interfaces, in-game HUDs, menus, and UI labels where grid-fit forms remain sharp. It also works effectively for retro-themed titles, headings, and graphic treatments that want an unmistakable 8-bit screen texture, particularly when set at sizes that align cleanly to a pixel grid.
The design evokes classic videogame and early computer-screen typography, delivering a distinctly retro, arcade-like tone. Its chiseled pixel edges and modular construction feel technical and playful, suggesting nostalgia, screens, and lo-fi digital aesthetics.
The font appears designed to mimic classic bitmap lettering, prioritizing grid alignment, high-impact silhouettes, and legibility in small, screen-oriented settings. Its modular construction and stepped diagonals suggest an intention to feel authentic to low-resolution displays while remaining bold in longer lines of text.
The glyph set shows deliberate, slightly irregular pixel decisions in joins and terminals that keep the texture lively rather than perfectly geometric. Numerals and capitals read as sturdy blocks, while lowercase maintains the same pixel logic with simplified curves and tight counters, reinforcing a cohesive bitmap feel in continuous text.