A few years ago when Joachim Müller-Lancé was doodling shapes on paper, he made the following observation: "My sketches exposed how letterforms can be viewed not only as black strokes on a white background, but also as shapes punching through one another." Hence was Shuriken Young boy born. Seen alone, much of its characters don't appear like letters at all; only their combination indicates text. It's a futuristic appearance typically seen in Japanese Manga comics and high-tech graphics. In truth, the name Shuriken Kid was influenced by William Gibson's sci-fi book, Neuromancer, in which a star-shaped Ninja weapon - a shuriken - looks like the hero's talisman. The dynamic, triangular characters of Shuriken Kid are particular to add remarkable flair to state-of-the-art tool or product packaging, toys and games, book titles, clothes labels, and computer user-group logos.
Font Family: Shuriken Boy® Std Regular