Sans Contrasted Goni 3 is a regular weight, very wide, very high contrast, italic, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, logos, sports branding, tech branding, posters, futuristic, sporty, sleek, techy, dynamic, speed, modernity, tech feel, distinctiveness, display impact, rounded, streamlined, soft corners, monoline-like, tapered terminals.
A slanted, streamlined sans with rounded corners and a distinctly engineered rhythm. Strokes show strong contrast and frequent tapering, with many letters built from smooth, rectangular-oval bowls and gently squared curves. Terminals often finish as thin horizontal or angled cuts, giving a fast, aerodynamic feel, while counters stay open and geometric. Proportions run broad with generous horizontal reach, and the overall spacing and letterfit feel designed for a continuous, flowing word shape rather than static blocks.
Best suited to display sizes where the tapered contrast and rounded geometry can be appreciated—headlines, wordmarks, product identities, and branding for technology, automotive, or sports contexts. It can work for short UI labels or packaging callouts when set with ample size and spacing, but its stylization favors emphasis text over long-form reading.
The tone reads contemporary and kinetic—more “designed object” than neutral text face. Its italic posture, softened geometry, and high-contrast details suggest speed, motion, and a slightly sci‑fi sensibility without becoming decorative.
The design appears intended to merge a clean sans foundation with a forward-leaning, speed-oriented silhouette. By pairing wide proportions with rounded, high-contrast construction and crisp cut terminals, it aims to feel modern, technical, and energetic in branding and display applications.
Several forms emphasize horizontal sweeps and flattened curves, producing a distinctive baseline glide in words. The contrast and tapered joins become more prominent at smaller details (crossbars, hooks, and entry/exit strokes), which adds character but also makes the texture more stylized than purely utilitarian.