Sans Other Syle 7 is a regular weight, very wide, monoline, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, logos, posters, game ui, tech branding, futuristic, technical, digital, industrial, sci-fi, sci-fi display, tech aesthetic, constructed geometry, brand impact, square, angular, geometric, modular, sharp.
A geometric sans with a modular, squared construction and consistently even stroke weight. Corners are predominantly hard and right-angled, with occasional chamfered cuts and a few pointed joins (notably in forms like V/W), creating a circuit-like, segmented feel. Counters tend toward rectangular shapes, apertures are tight, and curves are largely minimized or implied through stepped geometry. Proportions run wide with generous horizontal spans and a clean, rigid baseline rhythm, giving the alphabet a structured, grid-based presence.
Best suited for headlines, logo types, titles, and short bursts of text where its geometric detailing can read clearly. It works especially well for technology branding, sci‑fi or gaming interfaces, packaging accents, and signage-style graphics that benefit from a crisp, engineered look. For long-form reading, its tight apertures and highly constructed shapes are more appropriate as a stylistic accent than as a primary text face.
The overall tone is futuristic and technical, with a distinctly digital, interface-forward character. Its sharp geometry and constructed shapes evoke sci‑fi titles, hardware labeling, and engineered systems rather than humanist warmth. The wide stance and squared counters add a bold, assertive voice suited to high-tech and industrial themes.
The design appears intended to deliver a distinctly constructed, grid-driven sans that signals technology and futurism through squared counters, segmented strokes, and sharp terminals. It prioritizes visual identity and thematic atmosphere over conventional text neutrality, aiming for a clean yet characterful display voice.
Several glyphs use unconventional, stylized structures (including segmented strokes and atypical diagonals), which increases personality and reinforces a constructed aesthetic. The numerals mirror the same rectangular logic, maintaining a cohesive, display-oriented texture across letters and figures.