Sans Contrasted Yibi 4 is a very bold, very wide, medium contrast, italic, normal x-height font.
Keywords: sports branding, team apparel, esports, headlines, posters, sporty, aggressive, futuristic, techy, dynamic, speed cueing, impact, tech styling, brand voice, headline focus, oblique, angular, chamfered, wedge cuts, compact counters.
A heavy, forward-slanted display sans with wide proportions and tightly controlled spacing. Letterforms are built from strong, angular geometry with frequent chamfered corners and wedge-like cut-ins that create sharp terminals and notched joins. Strokes show noticeable modulation within the blocky forms, and many glyphs emphasize long horizontal sweeps that reinforce a fast, aerodynamic silhouette. Counters are compact and often squared-off, keeping the texture dense and high-impact at larger sizes.
Best suited for short, high-impact settings such as sports and esports identities, event headlines, posters, packaging callouts, and UI/overlay titles where motion and intensity are desired. It can also work for logos and wordmarks that benefit from an aggressive, performance-oriented stance, but its dense counters and sharp detailing make it less appropriate for long-form reading.
The overall tone is energetic and assertive, with a speed-and-power feel associated with performance design. Its sharp angles and slanted rhythm read as modern and competitive, leaning toward a tactical, high-adrenaline voice rather than a neutral everyday one.
The design appears intended to project speed and strength through oblique stance, wide set, and angular, chamfered construction. The repeated wedge cuts and crisp terminals suggest a deliberate effort to create a branded, technical display voice that feels competitive and modern.
The distinctive notches and angled terminals are consistent across capitals, lowercase, and numerals, giving the typeface a cohesive “cut metal” or “racing livery” character. The sample text shows the face maintaining a strong, continuous slant and a dark typographic color, with letter shapes staying legible primarily through silhouette and spacing rather than open interior counters.