Sans Other Fuso 17 is a very bold, normal width, medium contrast, upright, tall x-height font.
Keywords: posters, headlines, logos, game ui, sports branding, industrial, aggressive, arcade, brutalist, sci-fi, impact, tech feel, ruggedness, display branding, graphic texture, blocky, stencil-cut, angular, geometric, compact.
A heavy, block-built sans with squared proportions and a strongly geometric construction. Strokes are thick and mostly monolinear, with tight counters and frequent internal cut-ins that create a stencil-like, segmented look. Terminals are blunt and corners are largely sharp, occasionally softened by small chamfers; several glyphs feature distinctive diagonal slashes and notches that interrupt otherwise rectangular forms. The texture is dense and compact in running text, with tall lowercase and narrow apertures that emphasize a rigid, machined rhythm.
Best suited to display applications where bold, high-impact lettering is needed—posters, headlines, branding marks, packaging, and entertainment or game interface titling. It can also work for short labels or signage where a rugged, technical impression is desired, but the tight counters and stencil-like interruptions make it less appropriate for long-form text.
The overall tone is forceful and industrial, evoking signage, machinery, and game UI aesthetics. The angular cuts and stencil breaks add a sense of motion and menace, giving it a tactical, sci‑fi or arcade title feel rather than a neutral everyday voice.
The design appears intended to deliver a compact, high-impact display voice with a mechanical, cut-metal aesthetic. Its repeated notches and diagonal incisions suggest a deliberate effort to create a distinctive, branded texture that remains cohesive across letters and numbers.
The diagonal slice motifs appear repeatedly across both cases, acting as a unifying graphic signature. Numerals and capitals feel especially squared and emblematic, while the lowercase retains the same modular logic, keeping the set visually consistent at display sizes.