Sans Other Fupy 1 is a very bold, normal width, low contrast, upright, normal x-height font visually similar to 'Jetlab' by Swell Type and 'FTY Konkrete' by The Fontry (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: posters, headlines, logotypes, packaging, signage, industrial, techno, arcade, authoritative, utilitarian, impact, modular feel, industrial tone, retro-digital, blocky, squared, geometric, compact, stencil-like.
A heavy, block-constructed sans with squared outlines and predominantly right-angle geometry. Counters are tightly enclosed and often reduced to small rectangular apertures, creating a dense, high-impact silhouette. Terminals are blunt and flat, with minimal modulation and a largely rectilinear rhythm; occasional stepped cut-ins and notches add a slightly stencil-like, engineered feel. Uppercase forms are broad and imposing, while lowercase echoes the same rigid structure with simplified bowls and angular joins, maintaining consistent mass and a compact interior spacing.
Best suited for display typography where impact and a mechanical aesthetic are desired—posters, headlines, product marks, packaging callouts, and bold signage. It also works well in short, emphatic UI labels or game/tech graphics when set with generous size and spacing to preserve the tight counters.
The overall tone is industrial and techno-forward, evoking signage, machinery labeling, and arcade-era display graphics. Its dense black shapes feel forceful and utilitarian, with a controlled, regimented cadence that reads as functional rather than friendly.
The font appears designed to maximize visual weight and geometric consistency, producing a compact, engineered look with reduced counters and squared construction. The stepped cuts and narrow internal apertures suggest an intention to reference industrial lettering and retro-digital display styles while maintaining a unified, modular system across cases and numerals.
The design relies on small internal openings, so clarity can drop at smaller sizes or in cramped settings, while larger sizes emphasize its strong geometric patterning. The numerals and punctuation follow the same squared, cut-out logic, reinforcing a cohesive, system-like appearance.