Sans Contrasted Pume 3 is a very bold, normal width, high contrast, italic, normal x-height font visually similar to 'Shtozer' by Pepper Type, 'Glyphic Neue' by Typeco, and 'Gokan' by Valentino Vergan (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: headlines, posters, sports branding, esports, packaging, sporty, industrial, futuristic, aggressive, energetic, impact, speed, machined look, headline focus, branding, condensed feel, oblique, angular, chamfered, slab-like terminals.
A sharply oblique, heavy display sans with blocky geometry and frequent chamfered corners. Strokes are built from broad, flat planes with narrow interior counters and occasional slit-like apertures, creating a cut-out, engineered look. The rhythm is tight and punchy, with squarish bowls, straight-sided forms, and a generally compact spacing that reads as fast and forceful. Stroke modulation is expressed through abrupt thick–thin transitions and notched joins rather than smooth curves, reinforcing the mechanical construction.
Best used for headlines, titles, and short bursts of text where impact matters more than long-form readability. It fits particularly well in sports and esports identities, tech-forward promotions, packaging, and bold editorial callouts where a fast, industrial aesthetic is desired.
The tone is assertive and high-impact, suggesting speed, strength, and technical precision. Its angled stance and hard edges give it a forward-leaning, competitive voice suited to action-oriented branding.
The design appears intended to deliver a compact, high-energy display voice by combining a strong oblique slant with hard-edged, constructed shapes. Its notches and chamfers seem aimed at adding motion and a technical, machined character while preserving a consistent, modular skeleton across the alphabet and numerals.
Letterforms favor rectangular counters and simplified curves, which increases the graphic, logo-like presence but can reduce legibility at smaller sizes. Numerals and capitals maintain the same angular, cut-corner language, keeping the set visually consistent in headlines.