Sans Contrasted Gomu 2 is a very bold, very wide, medium contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, logos, gaming, sports branding, tech, futuristic, industrial, sporty, arcade, impact, futurism, branding, signage, interface, square, rounded corners, stencil-like, chamfered, modular.
A heavy, modular sans built from squared forms with rounded corners and frequent chamfers. Curves are minimized in favor of boxy bowls and rectangular counters, giving letters like O, D, and Q a squarish silhouette. Many joins and terminals appear cut or notched, producing a subtle stencil-like rhythm, while diagonals (A, K, M, N, V, W, Y) stay broad and geometric. Counters are generally compact and squared, and the overall texture is dense and strongly graphic, with consistent, engineered proportions across capitals, lowercase, and numerals.
Best suited to display applications where its geometric construction and notched details can read clearly—headlines, posters, packaging, and identity marks. It fits especially well in tech, gaming, esports, and industrial-themed branding, as well as UI titles and short labels that benefit from a strong, squared presence.
The font communicates a futuristic, tech-forward tone with an industrial, machine-made attitude. Its squared geometry and cut-in details suggest sci‑fi interfaces, arcade hardware, and performance branding rather than a humanist or editorial voice. The overall feel is assertive and energetic, optimized for impact.
The design appears intended to deliver a bold, engineered display voice that feels modern and synthetic. By emphasizing squared bowls, chamfered joins, and occasional stencil-like breaks, it aims to stand out with a purposeful, hardware-inspired character while maintaining consistent, legible letterforms for prominent sizing.
Lowercase forms echo the caps with simplified, boxy construction (notably the single-storey a and g) and a utilitarian, schematic look. Several glyphs feature internal cutouts and step-like shapes that create a distinctive rhythm at larger sizes, while the compact counters can make the face feel tight in dense text settings.