Sans Contrasted Fipi 2 is a very bold, very wide, medium contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: logotypes, headlines, posters, tech branding, game ui, futuristic, techno, playful, retro, industrial, display impact, futurist tone, branding, systematic geometry, iconic forms, rounded, squarish, modular, geometric, soft corners.
A chunky, geometric sans with squared counters, generous width, and heavily rounded corners that keep the mass feeling smooth rather than sharp. Strokes are largely monolinear but show subtle modulation in joins and terminals, producing a slightly sculpted, cut-out look. Many forms are built from straight segments and broad curves with horizontal emphasis, while apertures tend to be tight and rectangular. The overall rhythm is bold and blocky, with compact internal spaces and a consistent, modular construction across letters and numerals.
Best for display use where strong silhouette and personality are priorities: logotypes, titles, posters, packaging, and tech or sci‑fi themed branding. It can also work for game interfaces or on-screen labels at larger sizes, where its chunky forms and rounded geometry stay clear. For extended paragraphs, its dense counters and stylization are likely to feel heavy, so it’s better as an accent or heading face.
The tone reads as futuristic and tech-forward with a retro arcade flavor. Its soft, rounded corners add approachability and a toy-like friendliness, while the heavy geometry keeps it feeling engineered and industrial. The result is attention-grabbing and graphic, suited to designs that want to feel modern, synthetic, and a bit playful.
The design appears intended to deliver a bold, futuristic display voice built from modular, rounded-rectangle shapes, balancing an industrial system aesthetic with approachable softness. It prioritizes strong, iconic letterforms and a cohesive sci‑tech mood for branding and headline impact.
The design favors distinctive, stylized shapes over conventional text ergonomics, with several characters using simplified, angular constructions and squared bowls. Short crossbars and enclosed counters make the texture dense, especially in longer lines, increasing impact but reducing comfort at small sizes.