Outline Lyli 7 is a regular weight, wide, medium contrast, upright, tall x-height font.
Keywords: logotypes, headlines, posters, game ui, tech branding, futuristic, tech, retro, sci‑fi, arcade, display impact, futurism, tech aesthetic, brand identity, signage style, rounded corners, geometric, monoline, inline detail, double-line.
A geometric outline display face built from squared forms with generously rounded corners and consistently even stroke spacing. Letters are drawn as hollow contours with a secondary interior line that creates an inset, channel-like effect across most glyphs, producing a crisp, engineered rhythm. Proportions are wide and open, with a tall x-height and simple, mostly orthogonal construction; diagonals (notably in V/W/X/Y) are clean and symmetrical, while bowls and counters stay boxy rather than circular. Terminals tend to be flat and squared, and the overall spacing feels steady and modular, suited to large-scale setting where the outline and inner track remain clear.
Best suited for logos, titles, and short headlines where the outlined construction can be appreciated, as well as game/UI graphics, tech-themed branding, packaging accents, and event or club posters. It can work for brief callouts in motion graphics or signage-style compositions, but is less appropriate for long body copy due to the outline-only structure.
The layered outline treatment and rounded-rect geometry evoke a futuristic, interface-driven tone with strong retro-arcade and sci‑fi signage associations. It reads as playful but technical—more about spectacle and identity than neutrality—while keeping a tidy, systematic feel.
The design appears intended to deliver a distinctive, futuristic display voice by combining rounded-square geometry with a double-line outline system that suggests circuitry, tubing, or track-like channels. Its consistent construction and open proportions emphasize legibility at display sizes while prioritizing a bold, stylized identity.
Because the design relies on thin outlines and inset detailing, it will look sharp on light backgrounds and at larger sizes; at smaller sizes the inner channel may visually close up or compete with the outer contour. The numerals and uppercase have a display-forward presence, with distinct, angular silhouettes that maintain a cohesive, gridlike texture in lines of text.