Hollow Other Wode 4 is a very bold, very wide, very high contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, logotypes, posters, gaming, sci-fi ui, futuristic, industrial, techno, aggressive, arcade, impact, futurism, machined feel, branding, display, angular, stencil-like, cutout, geometric, sharp.
A heavy, extended display face built from squared, geometric letterforms with chamfered corners and frequent diagonal shears. Strokes are interrupted by deliberate internal cutouts and notch-like voids that read as hollowed segments rather than traditional counters, creating a segmented, mechanical rhythm across the alphabet. Curves are minimized and rendered as rounded rectangles where they appear (notably in O/Q), while horizontals and verticals dominate with occasional wedge terminals and slashed joins. The overall silhouette is compact and blocky, with tight interior spacing and consistent, graphic negative-space carving that gives each glyph a constructed, modular feel.
Best suited to large sizes where the internal cutouts remain clear—headlines, title cards, posters, esports or gaming graphics, and science‑fiction themed interfaces. It can also work for bold logotypes and packaging accents where a technical, engineered voice is desired, but may lose clarity in small text due to the dense cutout detailing.
The cutout patterning and angular construction evoke a sci‑fi and industrial tone—like plated machinery, racing decals, or arcade UI lettering. It feels energetic and assertive, with a slightly tactical, engineered character that emphasizes speed and impact over softness or tradition.
The design appears aimed at delivering maximum visual impact through a wide, block-constructed skeleton paired with distinctive hollowed detailing. The repeated knockouts and chamfered geometry suggest an intention to mimic fabricated metal plates or stencil-like industrial marking while maintaining a cohesive, futuristic display aesthetic.
The internal knockouts vary by glyph in a way that feels intentional and stylized, producing a distinctive “machined” texture in text lines. Numerals follow the same plated construction, and diagonals in letters like K, V, W, X, Y, and Z add a sharp, dynamic slant within an otherwise upright structure.