Pixel Other Efba 2 is a light, narrow, medium contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: ui labels, sci-fi titles, tech posters, game hud, branding, futuristic, technical, digital, retro tech, cryptic, segment aesthetic, digital signage, tech flavor, sci-fi tone, modular design, angular, segmented, octagonal, monolinear, geometric.
A segmented, quantized design built from straight strokes with clipped, chamfered terminals that create an octagonal, modular silhouette. The forms are largely monolinear with deliberate breaks at joins, giving characters a constructed, component-based feel rather than continuous curves. Counters are narrow and squared-off, with occasional small interior notches and gaps that reinforce the segment-display logic. Spacing reads consistent and tight, and the overall texture is crisp and schematic, with distinctive, angular diagonals in letters like K, M, N, V, W, and X.
Best suited to short-to-medium text where the segmented style can be a feature: interface labels, scoreboard or instrument-inspired graphics, sci‑fi and cyber-themed titles, game HUD overlays, and tech event posters. It also works well for logos or wordmarks that want a constructed, electronic look without heavy stroke weight.
The font conveys a digital, instrument-panel mood—precise, coded, and slightly retro-futuristic. Its segmented construction suggests electronic readouts, sci‑fi interfaces, and technical labeling, producing a cool, mechanical tone that feels engineered rather than handwritten.
The design appears intended to emulate segment-display construction in a typographic system, using modular strokes and chamfered corners to evoke digital hardware while still supporting full alphabetic text. Its goal is to deliver a clean, engineered aesthetic with strong thematic signaling for technology and futurism.
In text, the intentional discontinuities and sharp corners create a lively, flickering rhythm reminiscent of illuminated segments. Some glyphs lean on simplified geometry that prioritizes the display aesthetic over conventional typographic softness, giving the face a distinct, system-like personality.