Sans Other Jigi 5 is a regular weight, normal width, monoline, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, logos, posters, gaming ui, tech branding, tech, sci-fi, arcade, modular, industrial, futuristic feel, digital display, modular system, brand distinctiveness, angular, square, stencil-like, geometric, high-contrast counters.
A sharply geometric, modular sans built from straight strokes and 45° joins, with square corners and mostly rectangular counters. Curves are largely avoided; round forms like O and C resolve as boxy, open shapes, and diagonals appear as clipped terminals or pointed joins in letters like V, W, and X. The rhythm is tight and engineered, with frequent cut-ins and notches that create a slightly stencil-like, segmented construction while keeping stroke weight consistent. Uppercase forms feel compact and rigid; lowercase follows the same angular logic with simplified bowls and short, flat terminals, and the numerals are similarly squared and digital in character.
Best suited for headlines, logos, short labels, and interface-style graphics where its angular construction and segmented details can be appreciated. It works especially well for technology, gaming, and sci-fi themed branding or packaging, and for titles or pull quotes where a crisp, digital-industrial voice is desired.
The overall tone reads futuristic and technical, evoking display typography seen in game UIs, arcade cabinets, electronics labeling, and sci-fi interfaces. Its hard angles and modular construction also give it a utilitarian, machined feel that can come across as assertive and slightly retro-digital.
The font appears designed to deliver a distinctive, grid-informed, futuristic sans voice by prioritizing straight strokes, squared counters, and clipped joins. The added notches and open, rectilinear shapes suggest an intention to reference electronic display aesthetics while remaining a cohesive, typographic system.
Distinctive features include squared apertures, clipped corners, and occasional interior breaks that add visual texture at larger sizes but can reduce clarity in small text. The design’s strong geometry creates a consistent system across caps, lowercase, and figures, with a deliberate, constructed look rather than handwritten or calligraphic influence.