Sans Other Syda 1 is a regular weight, very wide, low contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: display, headlines, posters, branding, interfaces, techno, futuristic, digital, modular, schematic, tech aesthetic, modular design, geometric clarity, digital signage, square, angular, monoline, geometric, boxy.
A squared, geometric sans with a monoline stroke and predominantly right-angled construction. Curves are minimized or flattened, producing boxy bowls and squared counters in letters like O, D, P, and Q. Terminals are crisp and cut cleanly, with frequent use of open corners and straight joins that create a modular, drawn-with-a-ruler feel. The lowercase follows the same rectilinear logic, with single-storey forms and simplified shapes; numerals are similarly angular, with stepped diagonals in forms like 2 and 3. Spacing and rhythm read even and engineered, emphasizing horizontal and vertical alignment over calligraphic flow.
Best suited for display settings where its geometric character can read clearly: headlines, posters, tech-forward branding, packaging accents, and UI or HUD-style labels. It can also work for short paragraphs when a distinctly digital, engineered voice is desired, though its angularity is most impactful at larger sizes.
The overall tone is futuristic and technical, evoking interface typography, sci‑fi labeling, and digital instrumentation. Its sharp geometry and squared forms feel precise and controlled, with a slightly game-like, retro-computing edge in longer text.
The design appears intended to deliver a modern, techno-leaning sans built from modular, rectilinear parts, prioritizing a crisp, constructed silhouette and a strong geometric identity over traditional humanist softness.
Distinctive squared bowls and open, segmented corners give the design a constructed, modular personality. Diagonals appear selectively (e.g., A, V, W, X, Y), adding contrast against the otherwise orthogonal skeleton and reinforcing a schematic aesthetic.