Sans Other Olbe 9 is a very bold, normal width, monoline, upright, normal x-height font visually similar to 'Razorsuite' by Test Pilot Collective (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: game ui, posters, logotypes, headlines, packaging, 8-bit, techno, industrial, arcade, sci-fi, digital feel, retro-tech, high impact, ui labeling, branding, geometric, squared, angular, stencil-like, modular.
A blocky, modular sans built from squared strokes and hard right-angle turns. Letterforms are tightly constructed with uniform stroke thickness, sharply clipped corners, and mostly closed counters that read as rectangular cutouts. Curves are largely eliminated in favor of stepped geometry; diagonals appear sparingly and feel faceted rather than smooth. Spacing and rhythm are compact, with a strong grid logic that keeps shapes consistent across uppercase, lowercase, and numerals while allowing some glyph-to-glyph variation in width and silhouette.
Best suited for display sizes where its stepped geometry and tight counters can read clearly—such as game interfaces, tech-themed posters, esports or arcade branding, album/cover graphics, and bold packaging labels. It can also work for short UI labels or navigation elements when set with generous size and spacing.
The overall tone is distinctly digital and game-adjacent, evoking pixel displays, arcade UI, and industrial control labeling. Its heavy, mechanical presence communicates assertiveness and a utilitarian, engineered personality, with a retro-tech edge that feels suited to sci-fi and cyber aesthetics.
The design appears intended to translate a pixel/grid mindset into solid vector letterforms: compact, high-contrast silhouettes with minimal curvature and a consistent modular system. The goal is likely a strong, futuristic display voice that remains highly recognizable in titles and branding.
Uppercase and lowercase share a unified, squared construction, and several lowercase forms read as simplified, geometric counterparts rather than traditional text faces. The numerals are similarly angular and segmented, contributing to a cohesive, display-oriented texture that favors impact over long-form readability.