Sans Other Fipi 3 is a very bold, normal width, high contrast, upright, tall x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, logos, packaging, signage, industrial, techno, retro, authoritative, mechanical, impact, futurism, modularity, branding, squared, angular, blocky, stencil-like, compressed counters.
A heavy, squared sans with a strongly geometric, rectilinear build. Strokes are thick and largely uniform, with sharp corners, flat terminals, and frequent right-angle cut-ins that create compact, rectangular counters. Many curves are simplified into faceted or chamfered forms, giving letters a constructed, modular feel; diagonals (as in V/W/X) are broad and wedge-like, while rounds (O/Q/0/9) read as boxy loops. The lowercase maintains the same rigid logic as the uppercase, with simplified bowls and short arms, producing a consistent, monoline, poster-forward rhythm.
Best suited to display settings where strong silhouette and geometric character are desirable—headlines, posters, title cards, branding marks, and bold packaging. It also works well for punchy signage or labels when set with generous size and spacing to preserve the compact counters.
The overall tone is utilitarian and machine-made, evoking industrial labeling, arcade/retro digital aesthetics, and bold sci‑fi titling. Its dense interiors and squared silhouettes feel assertive and no-nonsense, prioritizing impact over softness or calligraphic nuance.
The font appears designed to deliver maximum visual punch with a modular, engineered aesthetic. By reducing curves to angular facets and using squared counters and cut-in details, it aims to feel mechanical and stylized while remaining broadly legible in short, high-impact text.
The design relies on tight apertures and small internal openings, which increases visual mass in words and can cause counters to darken at smaller sizes. Its distinctive, carved-in notches and rectangular joins create a branded look, especially in capitals and numerals, where the geometry reads like engineered components.