Slab Weird Ubvo 6 is a bold, normal width, medium contrast, italic, tall x-height font visually similar to 'ARB 93 Steel Moderne' by The Fontry (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: sports branding, posters, headlines, packaging, logos, sporty, industrial, retro, assertive, techy, impact, speed, display, ruggedness, novelty, slab serif, oblique, squared, boxy, angular.
A compact, forward-slanted slab serif with a square, engineered skeleton and consistently chamfered corners. Strokes stay sturdy and fairly even, with prominent rectangular slab feet and short, blocky terminals that read almost like inset plates. Bowls and counters are squarish and slightly condensed, giving the face a tight rhythm, while the slant and stepped joins add motion. Numerals and capitals share the same angular construction, with a slightly mechanical, modular feel and clear baseline emphasis from the heavy serifs.
Best suited to display work where strong silhouettes and a fast, assertive texture are assets—such as sports identities, event posters, bold editorial headlines, product packaging, and logo wordmarks. It can also work for short bursts of UI or technical labeling when a rugged, attention-grabbing style is desired, but its distinctive slab construction is most effective at larger sizes.
The overall tone is energetic and tough, mixing a retro sports flavor with an industrial, machine-made attitude. Its oblique stance and blocky slabs create a sense of speed and impact, while the squared forms and hard corners lean toward a technical, utilitarian voice.
The font appears designed to deliver high-impact, slanted display typography with a structured slab serif framework. Its squared counters, clipped corners, and heavy baseline serifs suggest an intention to blend speed and strength with a deliberately unconventional, engineered look.
The design maintains a consistent system of right angles, clipped corners, and slab-like anchors across both upper- and lowercase, which helps it hold together in bold display settings. The italicized posture is integral to the forms rather than a simple slant, reinforcing a dynamic, forward-driving texture in text lines.