Sans Contrasted Oknaf 5 is a regular weight, wide, medium contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: display, headlines, branding, ui labels, posters, futuristic, technical, mechanical, sci-fi, digital, futurism, tech tone, distinctiveness, display clarity, squared, rounded corners, geometric, modular, monoline feel.
A geometric sans built from squared forms with rounded corners and frequent open counters. Strokes are mostly even with occasional tapered joins and subtle contrast at curves, giving a slightly engineered, cut-out feel. Many glyphs show deliberate breaks or flattened terminals (notably in C, G, S, and several numerals), and the overall rhythm favors wide set widths and generous internal space. Curves are drawn as softened rectangles rather than true circles, producing a consistent, modular silhouette across caps, lowercase, and figures.
Best suited for display settings where its geometric details and open counters can be appreciated: technology branding, game and sci‑fi titles, poster headlines, product packaging, and UI/wayfinding labels. It can work in short text or captions when given adequate size and spacing, but its stylized apertures and modular shapes are most effective in larger applications.
The design reads as futuristic and technical, with a clean industrial tone reminiscent of interface lettering and hardware labeling. Its open counters and clipped strokes add a digital, sci‑fi flavor while staying orderly and restrained rather than decorative.
The letterforms appear intended to convey a modern, engineered aesthetic through squared geometry, rounded corners, and purposeful apertures. The design balances legibility with a distinctive technical voice, aiming for a contemporary sci‑fi atmosphere without relying on ornament.
Several letterforms use distinctive constructions—such as the single-storey a and g, angular bowls in B/P/R, and a sharply notched Y—that reinforce the mechanical character. Numerals echo the same squared, open approach, and the overall impression remains cohesive in both isolated glyphs and continuous text.