Sans Contrasted Pula 7 is a very bold, normal width, high contrast, italic, normal x-height font visually similar to 'Gokan' by Valentino Vergan (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: sports branding, racing graphics, game titles, posters, apparel, aggressive, sporty, industrial, futuristic, action, impact, speed, tech edge, branding, headline, slanted, compact, angular, stencil-cut, dynamic.
A very heavy, forward-slanted display sans with compact proportions and sharply cut, angular terminals. Strokes show pronounced contrast created by wedge-like joins, tapered transitions, and narrow internal counters. Many glyphs incorporate deliberate “cuts” or split-like gaps that read as stencil/tech incisions, producing strong rhythm and a fragmented inline feel without adding outline weight. The overall texture is dense and punchy, with tight apertures, squared-off curves, and assertive diagonals that keep word shapes energetic and mechanical.
Best suited for large-scale, high-impact applications such as sports identities, motorsport/racing graphics, game and esports titles, posters, apparel marks, and bold packaging callouts. It excels in short headlines, logos, and label-style typography where the angular cuts and slanted momentum can be appreciated.
The font projects speed and impact—loud, competitive, and slightly menacing. Its slanted stance and chiseled interruptions suggest motion, machinery, and performance branding, leaning toward a high-adrenaline, futuristic tone rather than neutral utility.
The design appears intended to deliver maximum visual punch with a sense of speed and engineered precision. By combining a compact, slanted structure with contrasted strokes and stencil-like interruptions, it aims to create a distinctive headline voice for energetic, action-oriented messaging.
In the sample text, the cut details and tight counters become a defining texture at larger sizes; at smaller sizes those internal breaks and narrow openings may visually fill in or cluster, especially in dense lines. Numerals match the same blocky, segmented construction, keeping headings and score-like readouts stylistically consistent.