Sans Contrasted Goju 10 is a very bold, wide, medium contrast, upright, tall x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, logos, sports branding, game ui, industrial, techno, arcade, military, sporty, modular build, high impact, technical tone, rugged display, octagonal, chamfered, squared, condensed terminals, blocky.
A heavy, block-constructed sans with squared proportions and consistently chamfered corners that give many glyphs an octagonal silhouette. Strokes are predominantly straight and planar, with a few angled joins and notches that create crisp internal cut-ins; counters are mostly rectangular and tightly enclosed. Curves are minimized, and where rounding would normally occur (as in S or G) the forms are faceted into angular segments, producing a sturdy, machined rhythm. Capitals read compact and geometric, while the lowercase maintains a similarly rigid structure with simplified bowls and short, squared terminals; figures follow the same modular, cut-corner construction for a uniform texture in headlines.
Best suited to display settings where strong, angular shapes can do the work: headlines, posters, logos, esports or sports branding, and game or tech-themed interface titles. It can also function for short labels or section headers where a rugged, industrial voice is desirable.
The overall tone is assertive and engineered, evoking stenciled signage, arcade-era display lettering, and utilitarian technical labeling. Its angular, faceted construction conveys toughness and speed, with a slightly retro-futuristic feel that reads energetic rather than neutral.
The letterforms appear intentionally built from a limited set of straight strokes and chamfered corners to create a cohesive, modular system. The aim is a high-impact, geometric display style with a technical, rugged edge that stays consistent across capitals, lowercase, and numerals.
The design leans on repeated chamfers and rectangular counters to maintain strong stylistic consistency across cases and numerals. Diagonal strokes (notably in V, W, X, Z, and 7) are treated as bold wedges, which helps preserve visual weight and keeps the texture even at large sizes.