Inline Ebwi 2 is a regular weight, wide, low contrast, reverse italic, tall x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, logos, game ui, tech branding, futuristic, tech, sci‑fi, retro‑digital, sleek, futurism, interface feel, display impact, retro tech, streamlined, rounded, monoline, outlined, geometric, modular.
A wide, geometric sans with rounded corners and squared bowls, drawn with a hollow outline and a consistent inline cut that reads like a double-stroked contour. Strokes stay largely monoline, with smooth, continuous curves and ac-like squareness in counters and terminals. The overall set leans forward subtly, and the spacing and widths vary by glyph, giving the line a lively, engineered rhythm rather than strict monospacing. Numerals and capitals follow the same modular construction, with open, track-like shapes and generous internal whitespace.
Best suited to display typography where its inline outline can be appreciated: headlines, posters, title cards, esports/game UI accents, and technology or electronics branding. It also works for short calls-to-action and packaging where a futuristic, engineered look is desired, but it is less ideal for long-form text at small sizes.
The inline outline treatment and rounded-rect geometry evoke sci‑fi interfaces, arcade signage, and industrial product branding. It feels precise and synthetic, with a slightly playful, retro-future tone that suggests circuitry, HUD graphics, and streamlined machinery.
The design appears intended to deliver a futuristic display voice using a rounded-rectangle construction and an inline hollow contour that suggests neon tubing or traced circuitry. Variable glyph widths and a slight forward slant add momentum, aiming for a distinctive, tech-forward identity rather than neutral readability.
The inline detail remains prominent even at moderate sizes, emphasizing the font’s “tubular” feel; at small sizes the inner line may visually merge, so it benefits from display settings. The angled stance and broad proportions create motion and presence, while the squared counters keep the voice technical rather than hand-drawn.