Sans Contrasted Hanu 3 is a very bold, very wide, medium contrast, italic, normal x-height font visually similar to 'Muller Next' by Fontfabric and 'Loft' by Monotype (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: headlines, sports branding, posters, esports, packaging, sporty, aggressive, futuristic, energetic, industrial, impact, speed, branding, display, texture, slanted, rounded corners, ink-trap cuts, high impact, compressed counters.
A heavy, forward-slanted sans with blocky, widened proportions and tightly controlled counters. Letterforms are built from chunky geometric masses with rounded outer corners and frequent horizontal slice-like cut-ins that create a segmented, machined feel across the set. Curves (C, G, O, S) are broad and smooth but kept compact internally, while straight strokes often end in blunt, angled terminals that reinforce speed and directionality. The overall rhythm is dense and uniform, optimized for strong silhouettes rather than fine detail at small sizes.
Best suited to headlines, logos, and short bursts of copy where maximum presence is needed—sports identities, esports/event graphics, poster titling, and bold packaging callouts. It also fits tech-leaning or industrial themes when used large enough for the carved details to remain clear. For longer text or small UI sizes, the tight counters and dense weight can reduce legibility, so it’s most effective as a display face.
The typeface communicates motion and impact, with a distinctly sporty, high-adrenaline tone. Its slanted stance and carved-in details evoke racing graphics, tech hardware, and action-oriented branding. The look is confident and forceful, leaning more toward display attitude than neutral text setting.
The design appears intended to deliver a fast, muscular display voice by combining a strong slant, wide stance, and repeated horizontal cut motifs. The goal seems to be instant recognizability and a sense of engineered motion, prioritizing striking silhouettes and branded texture over neutrality.
The horizontal cut details appear consistently on many glyphs and digits, functioning as a unifying motif that reads like vents or track marks. Numerals match the uppercase in weight and width, keeping a cohesive, poster-like color. Spacing appears tuned for compact, punchy headlines, where the strong black shapes can lock together into a solid typographic block.