Sans Contrasted Nehu 2 is a regular weight, normal width, high contrast, upright, short x-height font.
Keywords: display, headlines, posters, branding, gaming ui, techno, futuristic, angular, industrial, modular, sci-fi styling, tech branding, display impact, graphic texture, octagonal, chamfered, stenciled, sharp, geometric.
A geometric, modular sans built from straight strokes and squared curves, with frequent chamfered corners and clipped terminals. Many forms resolve into octagonal or rectangular bowls with crisp right angles, while contrast is created through alternating thick vertical stems and thinner connecting strokes. Counters are typically rectangular and tightly framed, and joins stay rigid rather than rounded, producing a mechanical rhythm across words. Proportions feel compact with short lowercase bodies and a relatively tall presence from ascenders and capitals; several glyphs show asymmetric cuts or angled spurs that add a constructed, pseudo-stencil flavor.
Best suited to display sizes where the chamfered details and contrast can be clearly resolved—titles, posters, logo wordmarks, album/game graphics, and tech-themed packaging. It can also work for short UI labels or interface headers in futuristic or industrial design systems, but is less ideal for long-form reading where the strong patterning may become fatiguing.
The overall tone reads technical and futuristic, with a schematic, engineered character that suggests machines, circuitry, or sci‑fi interfaces. Its sharp geometry and deliberate stroke breaks create a slightly aggressive, game-like energy while still remaining orderly and systematized.
The design appears intended to deliver a constructed, high-tech aesthetic by combining rigid geometry with conspicuous corner cuts and stroke interruptions. Its goal is to provide a distinctive, system-like voice that feels engineered rather than handwritten or humanist.
In text, the distinctive angled notches and clipped corners become the primary identifying motif, giving the face a strong patterning effect even at moderate sizes. The digit set follows the same hard-edged construction, and the most stylized letters (notably diagonal-heavy forms) stand out as graphic features rather than neutral text shapes.