Sans Contrasted Mirus 8 is a regular weight, normal width, very high contrast, italic, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, logotypes, sports branding, sci-fi ui, futuristic, racing, angular, technical, aggressive, speed emphasis, tech aesthetic, display impact, brand signature, oblique, condensed feel, sharp terminals, cut-in corners, dynamic rhythm.
A sharply oblique, high-contrast sans with aggressively angular construction and frequent cut-in corners that create a faceted, machined look. Strokes alternate between thick, wedge-like main stems and hairline connectors, producing a crisp, kinetic rhythm; many joins are pointed and the counters skew narrow due to the strong slant. Terminals tend to be blunt or knife-edged rather than rounded, and several forms incorporate diagonal bracing and clipped apertures that emphasize speed and directionality. Overall spacing appears tight in text, with a forward-leaning texture and noticeable per-glyph width variation that makes the line feel lively and engineered rather than uniform.
Best suited to short display settings where the angular detailing and contrast can read clearly—headlines, posters, esports or motorsport branding, product marks, and tech or sci‑fi themed interface titles. It can also work for attention-grabbing subheads, but extended small-size body text may be demanding because the hairlines and sharp diagonals dominate the texture.
The font communicates velocity and precision, evoking motorsport, sci‑fi interfaces, and industrial graphics. Its sharp angles and hairline accents add a tense, energetic tone that feels assertive and performance-driven rather than casual or friendly.
The design appears intended to merge a clean sans foundation with a deliberately aerodynamic, futuristic styling—using oblique momentum, clipped corners, and dramatic contrast to suggest speed, machinery, and high-performance aesthetics.
In longer passages the hairline strokes and sharp joins become a defining texture, giving the typography a wired, high-tension sparkle. The strongest impression comes from the combination of extreme slant, faceted corners, and alternating thick–thin strokes, which can read as stylized and display-oriented.