# Visual style: pixel-art 8-bit retro game — strict pixel grid, chunky blocky forms, a limited palette, no anti-aliasing. Playful and nostalgic. For gaming decks, retro-tech decks, nostalgic or game-flavored education / entertainment. --- ## 1. Shape & decoration - Shape language: everything aligns to a visible pixel grid — blocky shapes, stepped edges, sharp transitions, no smooth curves; optional 1-pixel darker outlines for definition. - Decoration: classic game framing — HUD bars, tile floors, sprite icons, chunky pixel borders. References NES / SNES / arcade composition. - Whitespace: grid-disciplined; let blocks sit on clean tiled ground rather than crowd. ## 2. Typography character - Pixel / bitmap display character for headlines; keep body in a clean legible face — full-pixel body type strains at reading length. > Families are chosen at confirmation `g`; this style asks for a pixel / bitmap display *character* for titles, legible body alongside. ## 3. Using the deck's colors - Colors used as palette slots: primary the dominant object, secondary the terrain / background, accent the highlights and markers; a darker shade of the primary serves as outline pixels. - Flat blocks only — shading comes from palette layering (lighter top, darker bottom), never gradients. > HEX values come from confirmation `e`; this style only governs the palette-slot, flat-pixel discipline — it names no colors. ## 4. Texture / elevation - No texture beyond the pixel grid itself; strictly flat blocks. Depth reads from lighter-top / darker-bottom pixel shading, not drop shadows. ## 5. Paired image-rendering `pixel-art` — 8-bit imagery on the same grid, sharing the retro-game aesthetic.