Sans Other Fuli 12 is a very bold, normal width, medium contrast, upright, tall x-height font.
Keywords: posters, headlines, logotypes, game ui, album covers, industrial, techno, aggressive, brutalist, retro arcade, high impact, modular system, futuristic display, stencil motif, blocky, rectilinear, geometric, stencil-like, monolithic.
A heavy, rectilinear sans built from tall, compact blocks with sharp corners and minimal curvature. Counters and joins are carved out as narrow, straight-sided apertures, creating a pronounced stencil-like, cut-out construction that repeats across the alphabet. Stems and bowls read as dense slabs with consistent edge behavior, while interior gaps and notches introduce a segmented rhythm that makes the letterforms feel engineered rather than drawn. Spacing appears tight and the texture becomes highly graphic in words, with strong vertical emphasis and abrupt horizontal breaks.
Best suited for large-scale display settings such as posters, impactful headlines, title cards, and branding marks where its blocky silhouette and stencil cutouts can be clearly perceived. It also fits UI headings and splash screens for games or tech-forward projects, as well as packaging or apparel graphics that benefit from a tough, industrial texture.
The overall tone is forceful and mechanical, with a high-impact, industrial presence that leans into sci‑fi and arcade-era display aesthetics. Its rigid geometry and slotted counters evoke modular hardware, warning labels, and futuristic interfaces, giving it a bold, confrontational voice.
The design appears intended to deliver maximum visual weight with a modular, fabricated look, using carved interior channels to create a signature rhythm while maintaining a cohesive, geometric system. It prioritizes striking word shapes and a mechanical aesthetic over conventional text clarity.
Because many counters are reduced to thin slits, smaller sizes may collapse into dark shapes; the design reads best when the internal cut-ins have room to breathe. The distinctive notches create a consistent motif across letters and numerals, reinforcing a modular system feel in continuous text.