Sans Other Fuwi 11 is a very bold, normal width, low contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: posters, headlines, album art, game titles, packaging, brutalist, playful, rugged, comic, poster-like, impact, expressiveness, diy look, edginess, title focus, angular, faceted, irregular, blocky, chiseled.
A heavy, angular display sans with faceted contours and deliberately uneven geometry. Strokes are chunky and mostly monoline, with abrupt cuts, notch-like counters, and occasional wedge terminals that make each letter feel hand-carved. The texture is intentionally irregular: widths and sidebearings vary, baselines and tops wobble slightly, and internal apertures are small, producing a compact, punchy silhouette. Numerals follow the same blocky, chipped construction, prioritizing impact over refinement.
Best suited to large-size applications where its faceted edges and irregular rhythm can read clearly: posters, bold headlines, title cards, album/cover graphics, game UI titling, and expressive packaging. It can also work for short, high-impact labels or badges, but is less appropriate for extended text where the dense counters and jagged shapes may reduce comfort.
The overall tone is loud, gritty, and mischievous, with a DIY, cut-out energy that reads as bold and confrontational rather than polished. Its jagged rhythm suggests street-poster immediacy and a comic-brutalist attitude, giving headlines a rough, animated presence.
The design appears intended to deliver maximum visual impact through a deliberately rough, angular construction—evoking cut-paper, carved wood, or chipped stencil forms—while maintaining a simple sans framework. Its variable, off-kilter proportions seem meant to add personality and motion to otherwise blocky letterforms.
The font’s small counters and tight interior spaces can close up at smaller sizes, while the intentionally inconsistent widths create a lively, uneven word color. Straight segments and hard angles dominate, with minimal curvature, reinforcing the carved/assembled feel across both uppercase and lowercase.