Sans Other Fuve 2 is a very bold, normal width, low contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, logos, game ui, packaging, industrial, techno, arcade, poster, aggressive, impact, futurism, industrial branding, display readability, retro tech, blocky, angular, stencil-like, squared, compact.
A heavy, block-constructed sans with squared proportions and crisp, chamfered corners. Counters are narrow and often reduced to slit-like apertures, creating a dense, monolithic texture across words. Many letters show deliberate internal breaks and notches that read as stencil-like cut-ins, while strokes remain uniformly thick with minimal modulation. The lowercase largely mirrors the uppercase in structure, producing a strongly geometric, all-caps-like rhythm even in mixed-case text. Numerals match the same rigid, cut-corner construction for a consistent, hard-edged palette.
Best suited to attention-grabbing headlines, posters, logo wordmarks, and branding that needs a rugged, techno-industrial voice. It can also work for game or interface titling and bold packaging callouts where large sizes preserve the internal cut details. For small text or long passages, increased size and spacing will help maintain legibility.
The overall tone is forceful and mechanical, with a retro-digital attitude that recalls arcade cabinets, sci‑fi interfaces, and industrial labeling. Its tight apertures and blocky silhouettes project urgency and impact, favoring display energy over softness or neutrality.
The design appears intended to deliver maximum impact through compact, squared forms and stencil-like interruptions, combining a utilitarian, engineered construction with a retro-futuristic display flavor. Its consistent geometry and reduced counters suggest a focus on strong silhouette recognition and a distinctly mechanical personality.
Because interior spaces are very small and the design relies on small incisions for differentiation (for example in E/F/C-style forms), the font’s clarity is strongest at larger sizes or with generous tracking. The stepped diagonals and chamfers give the face a purposeful, engineered feel, while the uniform stroke mass creates a strong figure/ground presence in headlines.