Serif Contrasted Hozu 6 is a regular weight, very wide, very high contrast, italic, normal x-height font.
Keywords: sports branding, headlines, posters, film titles, gaming ui, racing, futuristic, aggressive, dramatic, technical, speed emphasis, display impact, premium drama, tech styling, brand distinctiveness, oblique, angular, hairline serifs, sharp terminals, vertical stress.
A sharply slanted, high-contrast serif with a stretched, forward-leaning stance and strongly angular construction. Thick main strokes are paired with extremely thin hairlines and needle-like serifs, creating a crisp, tensile rhythm across words. Counters tend toward narrow, aerodynamic openings, and many joins and terminals resolve into hard corners rather than soft curves. Numerals and capitals read as condensed-in-detail but expanded in overall width, with consistent italic shear and a deliberately engineered, cut-metal finish.
Best suited to display typography where its razor-thin details and dramatic contrast can be appreciated—sports branding, racing-themed graphics, poster headlines, and cinematic or game title cards. It can also work for short UI labels or tech-forward packaging when set large enough to keep the hairlines intact.
The overall tone feels fast and performance-driven, like motorsport lettering or a sci‑fi title treatment. Its sharp edges, taut contrast, and strong slant convey urgency and precision, with a slightly aggressive, high-energy attitude.
The design appears intended to fuse a classic contrasted serif skeleton with a streamlined, speed-oriented italic for impact-focused display use. Its wide stance and sharp, engineered detailing prioritize distinctive presence and motion over quiet, text-first neutrality.
In the text sample, the extreme contrast and fine hairlines become the dominant texture, so spacing and line breaks matter: it looks clean and punchy at display sizes, while the thinnest details can visually fade when reduced. The silhouette remains highly distinctive thanks to the repeated angular notches, knife-thin serifs, and extended italic horizontals.