Sans Other Ibga 9 is a regular weight, normal width, low contrast, upright, normal x-height font visually similar to 'Kabyta' by Agny Hasya Studio and 'Gemsbuck Pro' by Studio Fat Cat (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: headlines, posters, branding, packaging, gaming ui, techno, industrial, futuristic, mechanical, utilitarian, industrial feel, tech branding, distinctive texture, constructed forms, stencil-like, ink-trap, segmented, angular, squared.
A geometric sans with squared proportions and softened corners, built from mostly uniform strokes and compact internal spaces. Many glyphs feature deliberate breaks and cut-ins that create a segmented, stencil-like rhythm, with notches at joins and corners that read like ink-traps or engineered joints. Curves are rendered as squarish rounds, and diagonals appear in select letters as sharp, planar wedges. Overall spacing feels structured and modular, emphasizing crisp edges and consistent, constructed silhouettes.
Best suited to headlines, logos, and short statements where its constructed details can be appreciated. It can also work for tech-forward branding, packaging, event graphics, and interface moments in games or media where a mechanical or sci‑fi tone is desired.
The design conveys a technical, industrial tone—clean, machine-made, and slightly aggressive. Its segmented forms suggest instrumentation, sci‑fi interfaces, or fabricated lettering, giving text a futuristic and engineered character.
The font appears designed to reinterpret a straightforward sans skeleton through a modular, fabricated lens—using strategic breaks and squared curves to evoke stenciling, machining, and digital display logic while maintaining clear letter identities.
The distinctive cutouts become a strong identifying feature at display sizes, where the breaks and notches read clearly and add texture. In dense text, those interruptions can visually compete with counters, so the style is best treated as a voice rather than an invisible workhorse.