Sans Other Soru 9 is a light, normal width, monoline, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: ui labels, headlines, posters, wayfinding, tech branding, tech, modular, futuristic, industrial, arcade, digital aesthetic, modular geometry, sci-fi tone, display clarity, squared, angular, boxy, geometric, sharp-cornered.
A geometric sans with a strongly rectilinear construction and squared bowls. Strokes are even and clean, with corners kept crisp and largely unsoftened; curves are reduced to subtle corner breaks, giving many glyphs an octagonal/box-drawn feel. Proportions are compact and slightly condensed in places, with generous internal counters and open apertures that keep shapes legible despite the angular language. Uppercase forms lean toward architectural, frame-like silhouettes, while lowercase mixes single-storey structures (notably a and g) with minimal terminals and simple joins.
This design is well suited to short-form settings where a crisp, digital-leaning voice is desired: UI labels, product panels, tech or gaming branding, and bold headlines. It can also work for signage or wayfinding in controlled environments where the squared geometry complements architectural or industrial contexts.
The overall tone reads technical and system-like, evoking digital interfaces, sci‑fi labeling, and retro arcade hardware. Its rigid geometry and squared rhythm feel engineered and utilitarian rather than friendly or calligraphic.
The font appears intended to translate a sans structure into a modular, rectilinear system with minimal curvature. The goal seems to be a distinctive, futuristic voice that remains readable through clear counters and simplified, consistent stroke logic.
Distinctive details include a boxy zero, a single-storey lowercase a with a flat horizontal bar, and a square, mechanical treatment across curves such as O/C/S. Diacritics are not shown; the sample text suggests consistent spacing and a steady horizontal rhythm suited to display settings.