Sans Other Ohfo 13 is a bold, normal width, monoline, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, game titles, logos, packaging, medieval, arcane, ceremonial, fantasy, gothic, thematic display, medieval reference, brand distinctiveness, high impact, blackletter-inflected, angular, carved, notched, flared terminals.
A heavy, high-contrast-less display face built from sturdy verticals and broad, flat horizontals, with frequent chamfered corners and wedge-like notches that create a carved, cut-metal feel. Bowls and curves are simplified into squared-off arcs, while joins often form sharp inner angles, producing a rhythmic pattern of spikes and scoops. Terminals tend to flare or step outward rather than taper, and counters are compact, giving the letters a dense, emblematic silhouette. Numerals follow the same blocky construction, with squared shoulders and occasional cut-ins that echo the uppercase forms.
Best suited for headlines, titles, and branding where a strong thematic voice is desired—especially fantasy, medieval, or magic-adjacent projects. It can work well on posters, album or book covers, game UI titling, and packaging that benefits from a bold, carved aesthetic. For longer reading, it’s more effective in short bursts or callouts where texture and mood matter more than neutrality.
The overall tone reads medieval and arcane—suggestive of fantasy titles, ritual signage, and old-world craftsmanship. Its bold, armored shapes feel assertive and ceremonial, with a slightly ominous, dungeon-crawl atmosphere that still remains playful in short phrases.
The font appears designed to translate blackletter and medieval signpainting cues into a simplified, blocky display construction that stays punchy and reproducible. Its consistent, chiseled details aim to create immediate atmosphere and a distinctive word-shape suitable for titling and identity work.
The design mixes geometric stability (straight stems, flat caps) with idiosyncratic details like inset cuts and hook-like curves, creating strong texture at headline sizes. The lowercase maintains the same display intensity as the capitals, so paragraphs become highly patterned and attention-grabbing rather than quiet or transparent.