Sans Contrasted Yise 8 is a very bold, very wide, medium contrast, italic, normal x-height font visually similar to 'High Swift' by Variatype (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: sports branding, racing livery, gaming titles, tech posters, headlines, racing, futuristic, aggressive, sporty, tech, convey speed, signal performance, look futuristic, maximize impact, add aggression, slanted, angular, beveled, compressed counters, sharp terminals.
A slanted, high-impact sans with strongly angular construction and broad, blocky proportions. Strokes are heavy with visible modulation created by sharp cut-ins, beveled joins, and wedge-like terminals rather than smooth curves. Counters tend to be compact and often squared-off, while many glyphs use forward-leaning horizontals and stepped notches that reinforce motion. The overall rhythm is tight and mechanical, with consistent, hard-edged geometry and minimal rounding throughout.
Best suited to display applications where impact and motion are priorities: sports identities, racing-themed graphics, gaming titles, esports visuals, posters, and attention-grabbing headlines. It also works well for short UI labels or product marks in a tech/performance context when set large enough to preserve the tight counters and internal notches.
The font projects speed and force, evoking motorsport graphics, arcade sci‑fi, and performance branding. Its sharp facets and forward lean feel energetic and assertive, with a distinctly technical, engineered attitude rather than a friendly or neutral tone.
The design appears intended to deliver a fast, performance-driven look through forward-leaning geometry and chiseled, aerodynamic letterforms. Its consistent faceting and compact counters suggest an emphasis on a mechanical, futuristic voice that remains legible in bold, headline-driven settings.
Uppercase and lowercase share a unified, stencil-like logic of angled cutouts and segmented curves, giving text a distinctly modular silhouette. Numerals match the same faceted language, reading like instrumentation or jersey numbering when set large. The dense interior spaces and strong slant make it most visually convincing at display sizes where the internal cut-ins remain clear.