Despite the availability of other fonts (e.g., Shree-Lipi, GujShruti), Title Two dominated specific niches:

| Domain | Reason for Preference | |------------|---------------------------| | Newspaper headlines | Exceptional boldness and legibility at large point sizes (24–72 pt). | | Religious pamphlets | Traditional serif appearance perceived as “sacred” or formal. | | Low-end DTP shops | Small file size; worked on low-RAM systems (Pentium II/III). | | School textbooks (unofficial) | Character shapes matched handwritten teaching styles. |

Since the adoption of Unicode (Gujarati range: U+0A80–U+0AFF), Title Two has become a legacy liability:

As the name suggests, "Title Two" was designed for titles and headlines. It possesses a bold to extra-bold weight. In the era of offset printing, ink spread was a common issue; bolder fonts like Title Two ensured that headlines remained legible and distinct even if the ink bled slightly. It commands attention, making it ideal for newspaper mastheads, chapter titles, and advertisement headers.