Font Directory
Overlord
Overlord includes 1 downloadable variant for live preview and testing.
Font Specimen
Details
- Designer Nurinto
- Foundry Funtype Co.
- License Personal use only
- Format OTF
- Variants 1 file available
Overlord font.
Overlord is a sans serif display font with a regular OTF style, suited to visitors who want a strong title face for personal design projects. It is licensed for personal use only, so check the terms carefully before using it in any commercial work.
About Overlord Font
Overlord works best when you need lettering that feels more like a headline element than a long-reading text face. Its sans serif category makes it easier to place in modern layouts, but the name and presentation point toward bold, attention-focused use: title graphics, poster text, logo drafts, game-style mockups, social banners, and short brand concepts. Because only the regular 400 style is listed, it is a good idea to test size, spacing, and contrast in the preview before you build a full layout around it. A single-style font can still be useful, but it gives you less flexibility than a family with multiple weights or italics.
For logo work, try Overlord in short names, initials, or compact wordmarks rather than long taglines. If the letters feel too dense at smaller sizes, increase tracking slightly and pair it with a quieter text font for supporting copy. On posters and thumbnails, use it for the main phrase and keep the rest of the design simple so the display lettering can do the work. For web mockups, test it in hero headings, section titles, and callout graphics first. Avoid using it for paragraphs, legal text, navigation labels, or anything that needs fast reading at small sizes. Since the file is OTF, designers can usually install it on desktop design apps and test it in tools such as Photoshop, Illustrator, Figma, Affinity Designer, or similar software that supports OpenType fonts.
Features
- Regular 400 style in OTF format for desktop design and preview testing
- Sans serif display direction suited to short headlines, poster text, and logo mockups
- Single-style family, so layout contrast should come from size, spacing, color, and pairing choices
- Personal-use licensing, which is important for students, hobby designers, and non-commercial previews
- Practical for short text where a stronger visual voice is more useful than long-form readability
Best Uses
- Personal poster designs, title cards, and social media graphics
- Logo drafts, wordmark experiments, and branding mockups for non-commercial review
- Gaming, entertainment, or bold headline concepts where short text is enough
- Web hero mockups, section headers, and visual comps that need a display sans serif
- Creative previews where you want to test strong lettering before choosing a final commercial font
License Information
Overlord is marked as Personal Use Only. That means it should be used for personal, testing, student, hobby, or non-commercial projects unless you obtain a separate license from the rights holder. Do not assume it is cleared for client work, business branding, paid products, advertising, apps, merchandise, YouTube monetization, or commercial websites without confirming permission.
Designer and Foundry
The designer is listed as Nurinto, and the foundry is listed as Funtype Co. No additional designer biography or official licensing page is included in the font listing, so the safest approach is to keep attribution simple and avoid adding unsupported background claims.
Usage Tips
Use Overlord where the text is short and meant to be noticed. Start with large headings, then adjust letter spacing until the word shape feels balanced. Pair it with a plain sans serif for body copy, captions, menus, and license text. If you are preparing a logo or poster for a real client, treat the downloadable file as a personal-use preview and secure the correct commercial license before delivery.
FAQ
Is Overlord free for commercial use?
No. The listed license is Personal Use Only, so commercial use needs separate permission or a proper commercial license.
What format is the Overlord font file?
The listed font file is in OTF format, which is commonly supported by desktop design software and most operating systems.
How many styles are included?
One regular style is listed, with normal style and 400 weight. There are no additional weights or italics shown.
Can I use Overlord for a logo?
You can test it in personal logo drafts or mockups, but a real business logo or client logo would count as commercial use and needs the correct license.
Is Overlord good for body text?
It is better treated as a display font for short text. For paragraphs, pair it with a simpler, highly readable sans serif or serif font.
What should I check in the preview before downloading?
Test your actual words, uppercase and lowercase letters if supported, spacing, punctuation, and readability at the size you plan to use.
Want to browse beyond this family? Return to All Fonts for the main directory.



