Sans Other Vete 2 is a very bold, narrow, monoline, upright, normal x-height font visually similar to 'Chamferwood JNL' by Jeff Levine, '3x5' and 'Block Capitals' by K-Type, and 'Earthwerk' by PizzaDude.dk (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: headlines, posters, logos, signage, packaging, industrial, arcade, mechanical, sturdy, utilitarian, impact, compactness, retro tech, modularity, blocky, squared, stenciled, angular, compact.
A compact, block-built sans with squared counters, clipped corners, and largely rectilinear construction. Strokes keep a consistent thickness and terminate with flat ends, producing a dense, high-ink silhouette. Curves are minimized into hard chamfers and squared bowls, while joins stay blunt and geometric. The overall rhythm is tight and uniform, with simple interior cutouts that remain open and readable at display sizes.
Best suited for short, impactful settings such as headlines, poster titles, logo wordmarks, labels, and wayfinding or industrial-style signage. It also works well for game/tech UI moments, badges, and bold callouts where a compact, high-contrast silhouette is desirable.
The design communicates an industrial, machine-cut attitude—part arcade, part signage—favoring toughness over softness. Its rigid geometry and heavy presence feel technical and functional, with a slightly retro digital flavor that reads as engineered and no-nonsense.
The font appears designed to deliver maximum impact in a compact footprint through strict geometry and consistent stroke weight. Its squared, chamfered forms suggest an intention to evoke machine-made lettering and retro-digital display aesthetics while preserving straightforward legibility in large sizes.
Distinctive squared apertures and chamfered corners give many letters a carved or modular feel, helping maintain clarity despite the heavy mass. Numerals and capitals carry the strongest presence, and the overall texture becomes quite dark in paragraphs, making it best treated as a display face rather than for extended text.