Sans Other Fupy 9 is a very bold, normal width, low contrast, upright, tall x-height font.
Keywords: posters, headlines, game ui, logos, packaging, industrial, arcade, techno, stencil-like, brutalist, impact, futurism, display, branding, angular, blocky, condensed feel, notched, monoline.
A heavy, block-built sans with angular geometry and squared-off terminals. Forms are constructed from straight strokes and hard corners, frequently featuring small notches, cut-ins, and inset counters that create a machined, stencil-like silhouette. The lowercase maintains a tall presence with compact interior spaces, while overall spacing and widths vary by letter, producing a chunky, uneven rhythm that reads intentionally constructed rather than neutral. Diagonals appear mainly in K, V, W, X, Y, and Z, while many other letters lean on rectangular architecture and stepped joins.
Best suited for display work where its blocky construction can read clearly: posters, album or event titles, gaming and esports graphics, interface headers, product packaging, and logo marks. It can also work for short bursts of copy such as badges, labels, and callouts where a strong, mechanical voice is desired.
The tone is bold and assertive, evoking industrial labeling, retro arcade graphics, and sci‑fi interface typography. Its cut-in details add a rugged, fabricated feeling that suggests machinery, robotics, or game UI styling rather than everyday text.
The design appears intended to deliver maximum impact through solid, geometric mass while adding identity via notches and cut-outs. The overall construction suggests a deliberately engineered look—part signage, part arcade/tech—aimed at distinctive display typography rather than quiet legibility.
Counters are often small and squared, and several glyphs use internal “window” shapes that reinforce the modular, punched-out aesthetic. The texture becomes dense in paragraphs, with distinctive letterforms helping recognition at display sizes but reducing comfort at smaller sizes.