Outline Ofma 8 is a light, normal width, low contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, sportswear, logos, packaging, sporty, retro, arcade, technical, bold, athletic branding, retro display, geometric system, badge styling, octagonal, angular, geometric, outlined, chamfered.
An all-outline display face built from rigid, straight strokes and frequent chamfered corners, producing an octagonal, blocky skeleton. The contour is drawn with a consistent line weight and open interior space, giving each glyph a crisp, stenciled presence without any filled-in mass. Curves are largely translated into faceted geometry (notably in O, C, G, and numerals), while diagonals in A, V, W, X, and Y are steep and clean. Counters are simplified and squared off; joins and terminals favor hard angles over rounding, creating a uniform, engineered rhythm across caps, lowercase, and figures.
Best suited to headlines, posters, event graphics, and logo/wordmark work where the outlined construction can breathe. It also fits sports-themed branding, team or club merch, arcade-inspired UI, and packaging accents—especially when paired with solid fills, shadows, or color layers for added presence.
The look reads as athletic and arcade-adjacent—confident, energetic, and a bit industrial. Its outlined construction and clipped corners evoke scoreboard lettering, varsity graphics, and retro game UI, giving text a lively, high-impact tone even without a heavy fill.
The design intention appears to be a modular, chamfered outline alphabet that delivers a strong, athletic/arcade flavor while remaining clean and systematic. By translating curves into facets and keeping the outline stroke consistent, it aims for easy repeatability across glyphs and a distinctive, emblem-like silhouette.
Spacing appears generous enough for display sizes, but the open outline means thin interior gaps and small counters can visually break up at smaller sizes or on low-resolution outputs. The faceting is highly consistent, which helps maintain cohesion in long lines, while distinctive shapes like the angular G, the notched J, and the octagonal 0 reinforce a strong set identity.