Sans Other Fuly 4 is a very bold, normal width, high contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, logotypes, packaging, signage, industrial, techno, poster, retro, assertive, maximum impact, distinctive texture, modular system, industrial voice, display utility, stencil-like, modular, compressed, rounded corners, slotted counters.
A compact, heavily saturated sans with soft-rounded outer corners and distinctive slit-like interior cuts. Strokes are mostly rectilinear and monolinear in feel, with frequent vertical notches and segmented joins that create a modular, almost stencil behavior across letters and figures. Curves are minimized into squarish bowls and rounded rectangles, while apertures and counters are tightened, producing dense silhouettes and a punchy, blocky rhythm. Spacing appears tight and the overall texture is dark and uniform, with idiosyncratic internal breaks acting as the main differentiator between forms.
Best suited to display roles where its dense shapes and stencil-like cuts can read as intentional texture—headlines, posters, branding marks, packaging callouts, and bold signage. It can also work for short UI labels or section headers when set with ample size and spacing to preserve the internal cuts.
The font reads as mechanical and engineered, with a bold, no-nonsense tone that suggests signage, machinery labeling, and digital-era display typography. Its segmented cuts add a slightly futuristic, coded feel, giving it a confident, utilitarian personality with a retro-tech edge.
The design appears intended to deliver maximum visual mass with a distinctive modular/stenciled signature, balancing rounded exterior corners with sharp internal segmentation. The goal seems to be a memorable, industrial-leaning display sans that feels engineered and graphic rather than neutral.
The repeated internal slits and breaks become a strong graphic motif, which increases impact at larger sizes but can visually merge in smaller settings due to the dense fill and tight counters. Numerals and capitals maintain a consistent block system, reinforcing a cohesive, constructed voice.