Sans Contrasted Okkay 3 is a bold, wide, medium contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, branding, logos, posters, packaging, futuristic, tech, sci-fi, sporty, display, distinctive voice, tech branding, modernization, headline impact, graphic texture, geometric, rounded, ink-trap feel, horizontal cuts, high waistlines.
A geometric sans with broad proportions and rounded bowls, built from confident, mostly monolinear strokes that show selective thick–thin modulation. Many letters feature distinctive horizontal incisions or internal cut-throughs (notably in rounded forms like O, C, S, e), creating a strong midline band that reads like a stencil/ink-trap hybrid. Corners tend toward softened joins and smooth curves, while terminals are generally blunt and clean. The lowercase is compact and sturdy, with a single-storey a and g, a short-armed t, and simplified, highly legible counters that emphasize the typeface’s engineered construction. Numerals echo the same language, especially the curved 2/3/5/6/9 with sliced interiors and a streamlined, display-forward rhythm.
Best suited to display applications where the cut-through detailing can be appreciated: headlines, posters, tech or gaming branding, product marks, and packaging. It can work for short UI labels or signage when set with ample size and spacing, but it is most compelling when used as an attention-getting headline face.
The overall tone feels futuristic and engineered, with a sporty, sci‑fi edge driven by the repeated horizontal cut motif and wide stance. It projects speed, technology, and modernity more than neutrality, reading as intentionally stylized rather than purely utilitarian.
The design appears intended to modernize a geometric sans foundation with a signature horizontal slicing detail that adds motion, differentiation, and a high-tech voice. The wide proportions and simplified forms support strong impact and quick recognition in branding contexts.
The horizontal cut-throughs create a strong stripe-like texture in word shapes, which becomes a key identifying feature in text lines. At larger sizes this gives a distinctive, branded look; at smaller sizes the midline incisions may dominate the texture and should be considered when targeting dense copy.