Pixel Other Nohy 2 is a regular weight, normal width, medium contrast, italic, normal x-height font.
Keywords: digital posters, tech branding, ui headers, game ui, event titles, digital, retro-tech, instrumental, angular, sci-fi, segment emulation, retro display, tech styling, motion emphasis, modular system, segmented, chamfered, slanted, modular, stenciled.
A slanted, segmented display face built from modular strokes with chamfered ends and small diagonal joins, evoking split LED/LCD segments. The letterforms show intermittent breaks and faceted corners that create a crisp, mechanical rhythm. Proportions are compact with a steady x-height, while curved shapes are implied through angled facets rather than true curves, giving the set a consistently quantized texture across caps, lowercase, and figures.
Best suited for headlines, short UI labels, and display settings where a digital-instrument look is desired—such as game interfaces, sci‑fi or cyber-themed posters, and tech-event graphics. It can also work for numbering systems, dashboards, and title cards, but is less ideal for long-form text where the segmented breaks may reduce readability.
The font conveys a retro-digital tone associated with calculators, clocks, and electronic instrumentation, while the italic slant adds motion and urgency. Its angular segmentation reads technical and futuristic, with a slightly gritty, utilitarian edge rather than a polished corporate feel.
The design appears intended to translate segment-display logic into a full alphabet with an italicized, high-energy stance. By using faceted, broken strokes and consistent modular geometry, it aims to deliver immediate “electronic readout” recognition while remaining expressive enough for stylized branding and titling.
Lowercase and uppercase share the same segmented construction, which helps maintain cohesion but reduces the distinction between some similarly structured forms at smaller sizes. Numerals and diagonals are particularly prominent, and punctuation follows the same broken-stroke logic, reinforcing the display-system aesthetic.