Sans Contrasted Goty 2 is a very bold, very wide, medium contrast, upright, tall x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, logos, posters, game ui, packaging, futuristic, industrial, techno, arcade, modular, display impact, sci-fi styling, modular construction, systematic feel, angular, squared, blocky, geometric, stencil-like.
A squared, modular sans with heavy, rectangular strokes and crisp, right-angled corners. Counters and apertures are largely boxy and often notched, creating a constructed, almost cut-out look; several forms show small breaks or stepped terminals that suggest a stencil or pixel-informed geometry. Proportions skew broad with a tall x-height, and the rhythm is compact and mechanical, with tight inner spaces and a strong emphasis on horizontal/vertical structure. Despite the rigid grid logic, widths vary by glyph, giving the alphabet a lively, engineered cadence in text.
Best suited to headlines and short bursts where its geometric construction can read clearly and set a strong tone—such as game titles, sci‑fi/tech branding, event posters, interface labels, and bold packaging callouts. It also works well for large-format signage or on-screen UI elements where the squared, notched shapes reinforce a digital or industrial aesthetic.
The overall tone is assertive and machine-made, evoking sci‑fi interfaces, arcade hardware, and industrial labeling. Its squared notches and blocky counters read as purposeful and technical rather than friendly, leaning toward a bold, high-impact voice.
The font appears designed to deliver a high-impact, futuristic display voice using modular, grid-driven letterforms. Its notched, cut-in details and squared counters suggest an intention to feel engineered and systematized, balancing rigid geometry with enough glyph-to-glyph variation to keep word shapes recognizable.
The design relies on distinctive notches and squared counters to differentiate similar shapes, which helps at display sizes but can make smaller text feel dense due to the reduced internal whitespace. Numerals follow the same rectilinear construction, maintaining a consistent, system-like texture across mixed alphanumerics.