Sans Other Pebe 11 is a bold, very wide, low contrast, italic, normal x-height, monospaced font.
Keywords: gaming, esports, sci-fi ui, posters, headlines, futuristic, arcade, techno, digital, aggressive, digital nostalgia, speed, sci-fi branding, display impact, angular, square, pixelated, slanted, geometric.
A slanted, geometric sans with boxy proportions and a distinctly stepped, pixel-like construction in key joins and terminals. Strokes are uniform and heavy, forming sharp corners and chamfered cuts that emphasize a forward-leaning rhythm. Counters tend to be rectangular and tightly controlled, with an overall squared footprint and consistent cell-like spacing that keeps lines tidy in running text. The design mixes clean straight segments with occasional jagged notches, giving some letters a glitchy, 8-bit edge while remaining coherent as a set.
Well-suited to gaming identities, esports graphics, sci‑fi interface mockups, and tech-forward posters where a sharp, digital tone is desired. It can also work for short UI labels or on-screen overlays when you want a retro-futurist feel, though the stepped detailing is most impactful in display sizes.
The font projects a fast, game-influenced energy—part sci-fi display, part retro-computer grit. Its angled stance and hard corners feel assertive and mechanical, while the pixel stepping adds a nostalgic arcade/terminal flavor. Overall it reads as purposeful and punchy rather than neutral or friendly.
The design appears intended to merge a streamlined, forward-leaning techno sans with deliberate pixel-step artifacts, creating a hybrid of modern speed and retro digital character. Its consistent geometric structure suggests a focus on tight alignment and a strong, logo-ready silhouette.
Several glyphs show intentional stepped interruptions and blocky terminals that create a stylized, “digital artifact” texture, especially noticeable in diagonals and joint areas. The overall silhouette stays compact and squared, which helps maintain a strong, graphic presence at larger sizes while keeping a consistent texture across words.