Sans Normal Itras 2 is a very bold, wide, monoline, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, branding, game ui, tech packaging, futuristic, tech, retro, playful, bold, impact, sci-fi styling, geometric system, display clarity, rounded, modular, geometric, chunky, soft corners.
A heavy, rounded geometric sans with monoline strokes and a distinctly modular construction. Curves are built from broad arcs and flat terminals, producing squared-off counters and generous, soft-cornered rectangles in many glyphs. The proportions feel expanded and stable, with large interior apertures in letters like C, S, and e, and compact joins that emphasize a continuous, machined rhythm. Lowercase forms keep a single-storey, simplified logic, while punctuation-like details (such as the i/j dots) are clean and circular, reinforcing the geometric system.
Best suited for short, high-impact settings such as headlines, logotypes, posters, product names, and packaging—especially where a futuristic or digital mood is desired. It can also work for game/UI titling and interface labels at larger sizes where its modular details remain crisp.
The overall tone is modern and synthetic, evoking sci‑fi interface lettering and late-20th-century techno styling. Its rounded corners keep it friendly and game-like rather than severe, while the dense black shapes communicate confidence and impact.
This font appears designed to deliver a bold, futuristic display voice through consistent geometric parts and softened corners, balancing a machine-made feel with approachable rounded forms. The simplified letter structures and strong silhouette suggest an emphasis on recognizability and style over conventional text neutrality.
The design leans on repeated motifs—rounded rectangles, squared bowls, and straight horizontal cuts—that create strong visual consistency across caps, lowercase, and figures. Several letters show intentionally unconventional construction (notably in the diagonals and junctions), which adds character but also makes the voice more display-oriented than neutral text.