Slab Square Oplu 2 is a bold, normal width, medium contrast, italic, normal x-height font.
Keywords: sports branding, team apparel, headlines, posters, packaging, sporty, industrial, retro, assertive, mechanical, impact, motion, ruggedness, branding, beveled, angular, blocky, compact, square-ended.
A slanted, slab-serif display face with blocky, angular construction and crisp, square-ended terminals. Strokes are sturdy with a slightly chiseled, beveled feel created by frequent diagonal cuts at corners and joins, giving counters a faceted, octagonal character (notably in round letters and numerals). The rhythm is compact and forward-leaning, with tight interior apertures and a consistent, engineered geometry across caps, lowercase, and figures. Numerals follow the same squared, cut-corner logic, maintaining a uniform, sturdy texture in lines of text.
Best suited to short, high-impact settings such as sports branding, team and event graphics, bold headlines, posters, and rugged packaging. It can also work for labels, signage, and UI moments where a forceful, industrial display voice is needed, especially at medium-to-large sizes where the beveled details remain clear.
The overall tone reads energetic and assertive, pairing a sporty, jersey-like punch with a mechanical, industrial edge. Its hard corners and forward slant suggest motion and impact, while the slab details add a sense of toughness and utility. The result feels retro-leaning without looking delicate—more like signage, uniforms, and equipment markings than editorial typography.
The design appears intended to deliver a tough, fast, display-forward voice by combining slab-serif sturdiness with squared, cut-corner forms and a strong italic stance. The consistent faceting suggests a deliberate emphasis on engineered shapes and high-energy readability in titles and branding.
Diagonal corner cuts and squared bowls are a defining motif, producing a distinctive faceted silhouette that stays consistent at both glyph and word level. The italic angle is pronounced enough to create momentum in headlines, and the sturdy slabs help preserve clarity in high-contrast environments such as print on apparel or large-format graphics.