Alphii is where polygonal minimalism meets real-world usability. Born from the visual language of low-poly 3D models, this typeface channels the aesthetic of simplified geometry—those stripped-down game assets and architectural forms that sacrifice excess detail for speed, clarity, and style.
Most polygonal fonts stop at the gimmick; Alphii goes further. Its angular letterforms are shaped by the same design logic behind low-poly LOD (Level of Detail) models, but with a typographic foundation rooted in the humanist proportions of Franklin Gothic. The result is a font that feels technical without becoming unreadable—sleek enough for titles, clear enough for text.
With four weights and matching italics, Alphii adapts to a range of applications: UI overlays that demand precision, esports branding with a geometric edge, sci-fi interfaces that nod to early vector graphics, or architectural proposals that echo the lines of the renderings beside them. Its crisp intersections and open counters hold up on-screen, in print, and even at small sizes where polygonal novelty usually falls apart. Alphii speaks most Latin-based languages, making it a global solution for projects that merge the digital and physical worlds. Whether you’re labeling concept hardware, designing a VR start-up identity, or building a poster that looks like it stepped out of a retro-future game, Alphii delivers a consistent, modern polygonal texture without sacrificing legibility.
It’s the low-poly workhorse. The bridge between the wireframe and the final render. And for designers who want their typography to hint at a world made of planes and edges, Alphii is the model worth loading first.