Outline Pofu 3 is a very light, very wide, low contrast, upright, tall x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, logos, game ui, packaging, techno, arcade, industrial, bold, playful, display impact, tech styling, retro feel, modular system, boxy, geometric, squared, rounded corners, inline breaks.
A geometric, boxy outline face built from straight segments with slightly rounded corners. The contours are drawn as a single thin stroke, leaving the interiors open, and many glyphs include small internal cut-ins or “notches” that create a segmented, modular look. Curves are largely squared-off, counters tend toward rectangles, and terminals often end flat with occasional step-like joints. Spacing and widths are uneven in a way that reinforces a constructed, display-oriented rhythm rather than a text-face regularity.
Best suited for large-format display work such as headlines, posters, logotypes, titles, and branding where the outline can stay crisp and the inner breaks remain legible. It can also work well for game interfaces, tech-themed graphics, and product packaging where a modular, constructed feel is desirable.
The overall tone feels retro-digital and game-like, with an engineered, stencil-esque crispness. Its outlined construction reads as lightweight yet attention-grabbing, suggesting signage, UI overlays, and sci-fi or arcade aesthetics rather than traditional print typography.
The design appears intended to deliver a distinctive outlined display voice with a modular, engineered construction. By combining squared geometry, soft corner rounding, and recurring internal breaks, it aims for a recognizable techno/arcade character that stands out in short phrases and title settings.
The outline-only drawing means the font’s presence is strongly dependent on size and contrast; at smaller sizes the fine contour and interior breaks may soften or visually fill in. Rounded corner treatment keeps the geometry from feeling overly sharp, while the recurring notch details add a distinctive “assembled” personality across caps, lowercase, and numerals.