Sans Contrasted Fipu 4 is a very bold, wide, medium contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, branding, game ui, sports graphics, futuristic, tech, industrial, arcade, mechanical, display impact, tech aesthetic, geometric styling, retro futurism, ui clarity, rounded corners, squared forms, modular, chunky, stencil-like.
A heavy, squared sans with softened corners and a largely modular construction. Strokes are thick and confident, with subtle contrast created by short cut-ins, notches, and varied terminal shapes that carve out counters and joins. Counters tend toward rectangular apertures, and many letters use geometric openings (notably in E, F, S, and 2/3) that give the forms a technical, engineered feel. The overall rhythm is broad and steady, with compact internal spacing and sturdy horizontals that keep word shapes dense and blocklike.
Best suited to display settings where impact and a tech-forward voice are desired: headlines, poster titles, esports or gaming UI, product marks, packaging callouts, and signage-style graphics. It will also work well for short bursts of text such as badges, labels, and numeric-heavy treatments where the sturdy shapes stay clear at larger sizes.
The design reads as retro-futurist and machine-made, evoking arcade UI, sci-fi hardware labeling, and industrial control panels. Its squared silhouettes and chiseled gaps add a purposeful, mechanical tone—assertive, playful, and slightly militaristic without becoming aggressive.
The font appears intended to deliver a bold, geometric display voice built from squared modules with deliberate cut-ins to create distinctive counters and character differentiation. The goal seems to be a cohesive, futuristic look that remains readable while emphasizing a strong, engineered personality.
The lowercase maintains the same geometric logic as the uppercase, leaning toward simplified, display-oriented shapes rather than traditional text forms. Numerals and punctuation follow the same cut-corner, slit-counter language, helping the set feel consistent in headings and interface-like strings.