Sans Other Ingun 2 is a very bold, normal width, low contrast, italic, tall x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, sports branding, merch, packaging, sporty, energetic, punchy, playful, dynamic, impact, motion, attention, branding, display, slanted, compact, blocky, angular, rounded corners.
A heavy, slanted sans with compact proportions and an emphasis on solid, block-like forms. Strokes are consistently thick with minimal contrast, and terminals are predominantly squared-off with softly rounded corners. Many contours show slight angular carving and wedge-like cuts in counters and joins, creating a chiseled rhythm that stays cohesive across upper- and lowercase. The lowercase is large relative to capitals, with simple, single-storey constructions and tight, assertive shapes; numerals match the same sturdy, forward-leaning structure.
Best suited to short, high-impact settings such as headlines, poster titles, sports and esports branding, apparel graphics, and bold packaging callouts. It can work for brief blurbs or subheads when set with generous spacing and size, but it is primarily a display face where its dense shapes and energetic slant can do the most work.
The overall tone is fast, loud, and confident, with a distinctly athletic, action-oriented feel. Its forward slant and chunky silhouettes convey motion and impact, while the subtly notched detailing adds a rugged, game-title edge. The result reads as bold and fun rather than formal or understated.
This font appears designed to deliver maximum impact with a sense of speed and toughness, pairing a bold, compact silhouette with distinctive carved details for recognizability. The goal seems to be a contemporary, action-driven display voice that stays consistent across letters and numerals for branding and title use.
The design’s distinctive identity comes from its combination of strong obliquing, compact letterforms, and consistently carved interior shapes, which gives text a textured, muscular color. Because the weight is substantial and counters can be tight, clarity is strongest at display sizes where the internal cut-ins remain legible.