Outline Jidi 7 is a light, wide, low contrast, upright, tall x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, logos, sports branding, gaming ui, futuristic, technical, sporty, playful, retro, sci-fi styling, ui titling, modular system, display impact, rounded corners, monoline, squared forms, geometric, inline counterforms.
A geometric outline face built from uniform, monoline contours with squared shapes softened by rounded corners. The letterforms lean on straight horizontals and verticals with quarter-round turns, producing a clean, engineered rhythm. Counters are typically rectangular with rounded inner corners, and many glyphs feel like they’re drawn from a consistent modular system; diagonals (V, W, X, Y, Z) are crisp and angular while still matching the same stroke logic. Numerals and capitals are broad and stable, and lowercase maintains a compact, boxy construction with simple terminals and minimal modulation.
Works best in display contexts such as headlines, posters, packaging, and logotypes where its outlined geometry can be appreciated. It also suits gaming and tech interfaces, on-screen titles, and athletic or motorsport-style branding systems. For longer text, it’s better reserved for short blocks or pull quotes where the outline structure remains clear.
The overall tone reads futuristic and technical, with a sports/industrial edge reminiscent of arcade, sci‑fi UI, and schematic labeling. The open outline construction keeps it airy and modern while the rounded-square geometry adds a friendly, slightly playful character rather than a severe utilitarian one.
The design appears intended to deliver a clean, systematized, high-tech outline aesthetic built on rounded-square geometry. It prioritizes a strong modular identity and a contemporary display presence, optimized for bold titling and graphic treatment rather than subtle text typography.
The outline-only construction makes interior spacing and corner radii a defining feature, so the font’s character is driven more by silhouette and geometry than by stroke contrast. It appears most visually consistent when given enough size or stroke presence (via color, layering, or effects) so the contours don’t disappear. The modular, rounded-rectangle approach carries through consistently across letters and figures, supporting a cohesive display look.