Pixel Dash Leba 8 is a regular weight, very wide, low contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: game ui, sci-fi ui, posters, headlines, branding, retro tech, glitchy, arcade, industrial, tactical, digital display, retro computing, ui labeling, stylized legibility, segmented, modular, stenciled, blocky, monolinear.
A segmented, dash-built pixel display style where strokes are broken into short horizontal bars with occasional stepped diagonals for joins and slants. Forms are boxy and geometric with squared terminals and consistent stroke thickness, creating strong horizontal rhythm and a slightly fragmented texture. Counters are angular and open, and many shapes rely on partial outlines rather than continuous strokes, which emphasizes the modular construction across capitals, lowercase, and numerals.
Best suited to large-size applications where the segmented construction can read clearly: game and app UI labels, sci‑fi interface graphics, title cards, event posters, and punchy branding moments that benefit from a digital/industrial texture. It also works well for short numeric readouts, counters, and status-style messaging.
The overall tone feels like an electronic readout—mechanical, utilitarian, and a bit glitchy. Its broken strokes evoke retro computing and arcade screens while also suggesting a tactical, instrument-panel aesthetic.
The design appears intended to mimic a quantized, segmented display built from discrete bars, prioritizing a distinctive digital texture and strong horizontal cadence. Its geometry and intentional gaps aim for immediate tech signaling and memorable silhouettes in display settings.
The heavy use of horizontal dashes creates prominent scanline-like banding, giving words a striped silhouette at text sizes. Diagonals are rendered with staircase pixel steps, and spacing/sidebearings appear tuned for display rather than dense body copy.