Sans Other Olsa 3 is a very bold, wide, monoline, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, logos, game ui, packaging, techno, arcade, industrial, futuristic, utilitarian, impact, tech branding, sci-fi styling, signage, square, angular, rectilinear, modular, stencil-like.
A heavy, rectilinear sans built from straight strokes and hard 90° corners, with frequent chamfered cuts that create octagonal counters and clipped terminals. Curves are largely avoided in favor of squared bowls and boxy apertures, giving letters a modular, pixel-adjacent construction. Internal spaces tend to be small and geometric (often rectangular), and several joins use notched or stepped transitions that emphasize a fabricated, machine-cut feel. Numerals follow the same squared logic, with the 0 as a squared ring and the 1 as a blocky vertical form.
Best suited to large sizes where its angular details and clipped corners can be appreciated—headlines, posters, logos, and display titling. It also fits interface-style uses such as game UI, tech branding, and product/packaging applications that benefit from a bold, industrial-geometric voice.
The overall tone is assertive and synthetic, evoking arcade graphics, industrial labeling, and sci‑fi interface typography. Its sharp geometry and dense color create a bold, no-nonsense voice that reads as technical and engineered rather than friendly or literary.
The design appears intended to deliver maximum impact with a modular, grid-driven construction, prioritizing a futuristic/industrial aesthetic and strong silhouette recognition. The clipped-corner system adds distinctive identity while keeping the forms consistent and mechanically rational.
Rhythm is strongly grid-based, with repeated right angles and consistent stroke thickness producing a compact, high-impact texture in text. The most distinctive motif is the systematic corner clipping and notched detailing, which adds character while keeping the design strictly geometric.