Hollow Other Wovo 6 is a bold, wide, very high contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, logotypes, game ui, album art, glitchy, industrial, techy, aggressive, retro-futurist, digital distortion, industrial labeling, sci-fi styling, texture display, statement type, striped, octagonal, stencil-like, segmented, angular.
A heavy, angular display face built from blocky forms with chamfered, octagonal corners and pronounced internal knockouts. Horizontal striping cuts through stems and bowls at multiple heights, creating a segmented, scanline effect that alternates solid mass with thin gaps. Curves are minimized in favor of faceted geometry, counters are compact, and terminals tend to end in straight, squared-off edges. The overall rhythm is dense and graphic, with occasional irregular cut positions that make the silhouettes feel intentionally disrupted rather than cleanly mechanical.
Best suited for large-scale applications where the scanline cutouts can be appreciated: poster headlines, title treatments, branding marks, and entertainment graphics. It can also work for short UI labels or HUD-style elements in games or motion graphics, especially where a techno-industrial texture is desired.
The striped cutouts evoke CRT scanlines, signal interference, and stenciled industrial marking, giving the font a high-energy, slightly abrasive personality. It reads as sci-fi and cyber-adjacent, with a rugged, hacked or distorted tone that feels more bold statement than neutral typography.
The design appears intended to fuse a blocky, faceted display skeleton with deliberate horizontal knockouts, producing a recognizable striped texture that signals digital interference and industrial stenciling. The goal seems to be maximum visual impact and a distinctive surface pattern rather than quiet readability in long passages.
The horizontal breaks are a core motif across both uppercase and lowercase, producing strong texture in paragraphs and a distinctive banding pattern at headline sizes. Narrow apertures and compact counters can cause some letters to feel tight in continuous text, while the chunky geometry keeps the overall word shapes assertive and attention-grabbing.