Sans Other Komum 7 is a very bold, very narrow, low contrast, italic, normal x-height font visually similar to 'Factual JNL' by Jeff Levine, 'Mongoose' by Kostic, and 'Heading Now' by Zetafonts (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: headlines, posters, sports branding, packaging, signage, urgent, sporty, industrial, punchy, retro, display impact, speed emphasis, graphic texture, brand distinctiveness, condensed, slanted, wedge-cut, stenciled, angular.
A condensed, forward-slanted sans with heavy, blocky letterforms and minimal contrast. Many glyphs feature sharp, wedge-like internal cuts that read as stencil-style notches, creating a segmented rhythm through stems and bowls. Curves are tightened and slightly squared off, counters are compact, and terminals tend to end in blunt, angled edges rather than smooth tapers. The overall texture is dense and high-impact, with consistent slant and tightly packed horizontal footprint that keeps lines feeling fast and compressed.
Best suited to short, high-impact settings like headlines, posters, sports or motorsport-style branding, and punchy packaging callouts. It can also work for attention-grabbing signage or label-like applications where the notched construction becomes a visual motif. For longer text, the dense texture and segmented strokes are likely to feel heavy, so larger sizes and generous line spacing will help.
The cut-in strokes and aggressive slant convey speed and pressure—more “moving signage” than quiet reading. It feels assertive and mechanical, with a retro display energy reminiscent of industrial labeling or performance graphics. The repeating notches add a gritty, engineered flavor that pushes it toward action-oriented branding.
This design appears intended as a distinctive condensed display sans that combines speed-oriented slant with stencil-like cuts to create instant recognition. The goal seems to be maximum impact and a graphic, engineered personality rather than neutrality, using repeating internal notches to add motion and edge while keeping forms compact and bold.
The distinctive internal cuts are prominent across both uppercase and lowercase, giving the face a recognizable signature even at a glance. In the sample text, the dense spacing and compressed counters create a strong black mass, making it best treated as a display voice rather than a neutral workhorse. Numerals follow the same segmented, slanted construction for consistent headline use.