Sans Other Fali 11 is a bold, normal width, very high contrast, italic, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, sports branding, gaming ui, event titles, futuristic, techno, aggressive, sporty, industrial, speed, impact, tech styling, display clarity, brand distinctiveness, angular, slanted, condensed feel, sharp terminals, stencil-like.
A sharply slanted, angular sans with a forward-leaning stance and hard, cut-in corners. Strokes alternate between thick wedges and hairline connectors, creating a crisp, high-energy rhythm with frequent triangular notches and tapered terminals. Counters are tight and geometric, with several glyphs showing open or segmented joins that read as engineered cutouts rather than smooth curves. The overall texture is dark and compact in words, with strong diagonal momentum and occasional extended crossbars or underscored strokes that emphasize speed.
Best used at display sizes where its sharp diagonals and cutout-like details stay clear: headlines, posters, esports/gaming graphics, motorsport or performance branding, and high-impact promo materials. It can also work for short UI labels or interface-style titling when generous tracking and size preserve the fine connectors.
The design conveys a fast, mechanical attitude—more “track-ready” than neutral. Its sharp geometry and razor-thin joins suggest technology, motorsport, and sci‑fi interfaces, with an assertive, slightly combative tone that prioritizes impact over softness.
The font appears designed to deliver a sense of speed and engineered precision through extreme angularity, segmented joins, and a pronounced slant. Its construction focuses on creating memorable silhouettes and a dynamic texture for attention-grabbing typography rather than everyday reading.
In the sample text, word shapes become very distinctive thanks to the combination of steep slant, narrow apertures, and abrupt stroke endings; this increases personality but can reduce comfort in long passages. Numerals and capitals appear particularly suited to punchy, emblem-like settings where the angular construction reads as intentional styling rather than distraction.