Sans Contrasted Ryma 7 is a very bold, narrow, medium contrast, upright, tall x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, logos, game ui, album covers, techno, futuristic, industrial, aggressive, game-like, impact, sci-fi tone, system aesthetic, logo display, digital feel, angular, geometric, stenciled, modular, condensed.
A sharply angular, geometric display sans built from modular vertical stems, hard corners, and frequent diagonal cut-ins. Many counters are reduced to small rectangular apertures or notches, creating a stenciled, segmented look with strong black mass and selective interior breaks. Stroke endings are flat and abrupt, with occasional triangular joins and chamfered corners that emphasize a mechanical rhythm. Letter widths vary slightly by structure, but the overall texture stays compact and tightly set, with simplified bowls and squared-off curves throughout.
Best suited for short, prominent settings where its angular construction can be appreciated—headlines, posters, branding marks, and titles. It also fits interface-style typography for games or sci‑fi themed UI, as well as album/film titling where a hard-edged, high-tech voice is desired.
The font reads as futuristic and engineered, with a tense, high-impact tone that feels at home in sci‑fi interfaces and industrial branding. Its clipped counters and wedge-like joints add an assertive, almost weaponized energy, while the modular construction suggests digital systems, machinery, and coded signage.
The letterforms appear intended to deliver maximum visual impact through compressed geometry, stenciled counters, and consistent angular detailing. The design prioritizes a distinctive, system-like silhouette over conventional readability, aiming for a specialized display voice associated with technology and industrial aesthetics.
The design relies on negative-space slits and small boxed counters to distinguish similar forms, which creates striking shapes but can reduce clarity at smaller sizes. Diagonal cuts are used as primary detailing across many glyphs, giving the alphabet a cohesive, logo-like uniformity.