Sans Other Epbi 6 is a very bold, very wide, medium contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: posters, headlines, logotypes, game ui, packaging, arcade, techno, industrial, brutalist, sci-fi, impact, retro digital, display emphasis, geometric system, tech branding, angular, square, blocky, stencil-like, notched.
A chunky, square-built sans with tightly controlled geometry and crisp 90° corners, punctuated by consistent chamfered/notched cuts on joins and terminals. Counters are small and often squared, producing a compact, high-impact texture with little interior air. Horizontal and vertical strokes dominate, with minimal curvature and a slightly modular, constructed feel; forms like C, G, S, and 2 rely on stepped edges and straight segments rather than smooth arcs. Spacing reads firm and mechanical, and the heavy silhouettes create strong, poster-like color at text sizes.
Best suited for short, high-impact settings such as posters, titles, branding marks, and bold packaging panels where its compact counters won’t close up. It also fits game or app UI headers and sci‑fi/tech themed graphics, where the modular, angular construction reinforces a digital or industrial context.
The overall tone feels digital and game-adjacent—assertive, utilitarian, and slightly aggressive. Its rigid angles and notched details suggest retro arcade hardware, sci‑fi interfaces, and industrial signage, projecting a confident, engineered attitude rather than warmth or softness.
The design appears intended to deliver maximum visual impact through squared construction and signature notched terminals, evoking retro-digital and industrial cues while remaining legible in display sizes. Its consistent geometric rules and minimal curvature suggest a deliberately engineered, system-like aesthetic.
Distinctive internal cutouts and corner chamfers create a quasi-stencil impression without fully breaking strokes, which helps retain solidity while adding character. The numeral set matches the letterforms’ squared logic, and the punctuation/diacritic presence visible in the sample text (apostrophe, question mark, periods) follows the same blocky treatment for a consistent system.