Pixel Dash Huba 13 is a regular weight, normal width, low contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, tech branding, ui labels, game graphics, techy, retro, digital, industrial, glitchy, display texture, digital feel, systematic build, retro screen, modular, segmented, rounded, geometric, gridlike.
A modular display face built from short, separated horizontal dashes that stack into strokes, creating a quantized, scanline-like texture. Corners and terminals are mostly squared-off but softened by the rounded ends of each dash, which keeps the overall silhouette readable despite the gaps. Proportions are compact and fairly consistent across the set, with simple geometric construction and minimal stroke modulation; counters are formed by omission of segments rather than continuous outlines. Numerals and capitals share the same segmented logic, giving text a tight, patterned rhythm and a distinctive broken-stroke color on the line.
Works best for headlines, titles, and short UI labels where the segmented pattern can be appreciated without sacrificing clarity. It suits technology-themed branding, sci-fi interfaces, scoreboard or panel-inspired graphics, and retro game or arcade-style layouts.
The repeated dash segments evoke LED panels, early computer graphics, and terminal-style signage, giving the font a retro-digital tone. Its interrupted strokes add a subtle glitch/scan effect that feels mechanical and utilitarian while still playful in display settings.
The design appears intended to reinterpret a pixel/LED display aesthetic using discrete dash modules, balancing legibility with a distinctive broken-stroke texture. The consistent segment system suggests a focus on systematic construction and a recognizable, screen-native voice.
The segmented construction creates strong horizontal banding, so words read as textured blocks as much as letterforms. In longer lines, the recurring gaps produce a lively sparkle that favors larger sizes and generous tracking over dense small text.