Distressed Goha 7 is a regular weight, normal width, high contrast, upright, normal x-height font visually similar to 'Orgon' and 'Orgon Plan' by Hoftype, 'Mentone' by Paragraph, and 'Ranelte' by insigne (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: posters, headlines, game ui, packaging, apparel, industrial, rugged, tactical, gritty, utilitarian, thematic impact, weathered look, industrial voice, display focus, stenciled, chamfered, angular, blocky, weathered.
A blocky, angular sans with chamfered corners and squared counters that give many glyphs an octagonal, cut-metal silhouette. Strokes are generally straight and geometric with occasional diagonal terminals, and the contrast reads as punchy where inner cut-ins and tight joins create sharp light traps. The texture is intentionally worn: edges show scuffing and small voids, producing a rough-printed, distressed surface across both capitals and lowercase. Spacing and proportions are practical and headline-oriented, with sturdy verticals and compact curves that keep forms bold and legible at larger sizes.
Best suited for display uses such as posters, titles, and impactful headings where the angular geometry and weathered texture can be appreciated. It also fits branding and packaging for outdoors, industrial, or action-oriented themes, as well as apparel graphics and game/UI elements that benefit from a tough, equipment-like voice.
The overall tone feels industrial and rugged, like lettering seen on machinery, crates, or field equipment. The distress adds a gritty, lived-in character that suggests wear, friction, and utilitarian function rather than polish. It carries a tactical, no-nonsense energy that reads well in bold statements and impact-driven graphics.
Likely designed to evoke fabricated, stenciled or machined lettering with added wear, combining geometric construction with a distressed finish for immediate thematic impact. The aim appears to be strong readability in short lines while projecting a gritty, industrial personality.
Distinctive corner-chamfers appear consistently across rounds (C, O, G, Q, 0), reinforcing a mechanical, fabricated look. The distressing is moderate but noticeable in filled areas, so finer details can soften at small sizes or low-resolution output.