Sans Contrasted Goki 6 is a bold, normal width, high contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, logos, posters, game ui, tech branding, techno, sci‑fi, arcade, industrial, modular, futuristic display, systematic construction, signage impact, digital aesthetic, rectilinear, angular, square counters, extended ascenders, mechanical.
A rectilinear, modular sans with squared-off curves and crisp 90° corners. Strokes are predominantly heavy and uniform, with selective thinning at joins and interior cuts that creates a contrasted, engineered feel. Counters tend toward square or rectangular apertures (notably in forms like O/D/P), and many characters use open, cut-out construction with straight terminals rather than smooth curves. Proportions are compact with a normal x-height, while ascenders and capitals feel tall and rigidly aligned, giving lines a strongly gridded rhythm.
Best suited for headlines, titles, logos, and short UI strings where its geometric construction can be appreciated. It works particularly well for gaming, tech, and sci‑fi themed branding, posters, packaging callouts, and signage-style graphics. For long passages at small sizes, the tight interior openings suggest using generous tracking and line spacing.
The font projects a digital, system-built personality—clean, assertive, and a bit futuristic. Its blocky geometry and stencil-like openings evoke arcade interfaces, sci‑fi signage, and industrial labeling, reading as functional and technological rather than organic or literary.
The design appears intended to translate a grid-based, machine-readable aesthetic into a bold display sans, balancing strict orthogonal construction with enough diagonal structure to keep word shapes distinct. Its contrasted cuts and squared counters aim to deliver a futuristic, industrial tone while maintaining clear, consistent rhythm across uppercase, lowercase, and numerals.
Letterforms show intentional simplification and modular reuse across shapes, producing strong visual consistency at display sizes. The angular diagonals in K, V, W, and X add momentum against the otherwise orthogonal framework, while the squared punctuation-like details and tight internal gaps emphasize a pixel-adjacent, device-ui character.