Sans Other Fulo 2 is a very bold, narrow, high contrast, upright, tall x-height font visually similar to 'Dimensions' by Dharma Type, 'Blackbarry NF' by Nick's Fonts, 'Motte' by TypeClassHeroes, 'Ravenda' by Typehand Studio, 'Chudesny' by Umka Type, and 'Muscle Cars' by Vozzy (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: posters, headlines, logotypes, packaging, album covers, industrial, authoritative, retro, mechanical, dramatic, impact, compression, industrial tone, distinctive texture, condensed, blocky, geometric, angular, modular.
A condensed, heavy display sans with tall, rectangular proportions and strongly geometric construction. Strokes are mostly monolinear in feel but interrupted by distinctive vertical slit counters and hard, stepped joins that create a segmented, modular rhythm. Curves are squarish and compressed, terminals are blunt and squared off, and punctuation and numerals follow the same tall, compact logic for a consistent, poster-like texture.
Best suited to bold headlines, poster typography, branding marks, and short callouts where its compact width and high visual weight can maximize presence in limited space. It can also work for packaging and title treatments that benefit from a mechanical, industrial flavor, but is less appropriate for long-form reading.
The font projects an industrial, machine-made attitude with a slightly retro, poster-era punch. Its dense black mass and slit-like openings give it a dramatic, almost stencil-meets-tech tone that reads as assertive and utilitarian rather than friendly.
Likely designed as an attention-forward display face that compresses width while maintaining a solid, imposing silhouette. The segmented slit counters and squared geometry appear intended to create a memorable, industrial signature and a strong vertical rhythm in titles.
In text, the narrow set and frequent internal cuts create a strong vertical cadence and tight color, which can reduce clarity at smaller sizes but heightens impact at display scales. The distinctive counter treatment is a defining signature and becomes more prominent as tracking tightens.