Sans Normal Tike 3 is a very bold, very wide, high contrast, upright, tall x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, logos, posters, sports branding, game ui, techy, futuristic, industrial, sporty, assertive, impact, modernity, precision, branding, display, rounded corners, chamfered cuts, squared bowls, wide stance, geometric.
A heavy, geometric sans with a wide stance and compact interior counters. Curves are rendered as squared, rounded-rectangle bowls rather than true circles, and many joins and terminals are treated with angled chamfers that create a streamlined, engineered look. Stroke endings are generally blunt and clean, with consistent corner radii that keep the dense weight from feeling messy. The lowercase shows a tall x-height with simple, sturdy shapes; the single-story a and g are blocky and open, and the figures follow the same squared-round construction with horizontal cuts and slots in several numerals.
Best suited to headlines and short display text where its dense weight and squared-round geometry can read clearly. It works well for logos, esports or sports branding, tech packaging, and interface or game UI titles that benefit from a bold, engineered aesthetic. For long passages, the tight counters suggest using generous size and spacing.
The overall tone is confident and machine-like, reading as modern, technical, and performance-oriented. Its crisp chamfers and compact counters evoke sci‑fi interfaces and industrial labeling, while the rounded corners keep it approachable rather than aggressive.
The font appears designed to deliver maximum impact with a cohesive geometric system, combining rounded-rectangle forms with chamfered details to suggest speed, precision, and modern technology. Its consistent construction across letters and numerals indicates an intention for strong branding and display use rather than subtle text settings.
The design emphasizes horizontal and vertical structure, with diagonals used as functional cuts (notably in letters like K, N, W, X, and Z). Several glyphs incorporate intentional gaps or inset strokes (such as the S and some numerals), adding a modular, display-driven texture at larger sizes.