Stencil Tigu 3 is a bold, very wide, medium contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, game ui, packaging, logos, futuristic, industrial, aggressive, military, techno, high impact, stencil utility, sci-fi styling, industrial labeling, angular, geometric, faceted, chamfered, hard-edged.
A heavy, all-caps–leaning display design built from flat planes and sharp chamfers, with corners cut into consistent angles that create a faceted, polygonal silhouette. Strokes are interrupted by deliberate breaks and notches that read as stencil bridges, producing strong internal rhythm and a segmented texture across words. Counters tend toward compact, angular shapes (often octagonal), and curves are largely replaced by straight segments, giving the alphabet a rigid, engineered feel. Lowercase follows the same constructed logic with simplified forms and frequent cut-ins, while figures echo the same modular geometry for a cohesive set.
This font is best suited to large-format display settings such as headlines, posters, title cards, game or film graphics, and branding marks that benefit from a tough, technical voice. It can also work for packaging or product labeling where a fabricated, industrial aesthetic is desired, especially in short phrases rather than long body text.
The overall tone is assertive and mechanical, evoking sci-fi interfaces, industrial labeling, and tactical or utilitarian signage. Its sharp cuts and segmented joins add tension and speed, making the texture feel bold, forceful, and deliberately “manufactured.”
The design appears intended to deliver a high-impact, angular stencil look with a futuristic-industrial character, using consistent chamfers and bridge breaks to create a recognizable texture and strong presence in display typography.
The frequent diagonal terminals and inset cuts create distinctive word shapes but can also reduce character differentiation at smaller sizes; the design reads best when given space and scale. The consistent chamfer angles and repeated bridge motifs help maintain uniformity across glyphs, especially in round characters and numerals.