Sans Other Poba 1 is a bold, normal width, low contrast, italic, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, logotypes, sports branding, gaming ui, techno, sporty, futuristic, industrial, aggressive, impact, speed, precision, tech branding, display voice, angular, chamfered, slanted, compact, modular.
A sharply slanted, geometric sans with heavy strokes and crisp chamfered corners throughout. Forms are built from straight segments and angled terminals, with squared counters and minimal curvature, producing a faceted, almost stencil-like construction in places. The uppercase reads compact and rigid, while the lowercase keeps a similarly engineered structure with simplified bowls and single-storey forms. Numerals follow the same angular logic, with boxy shapes and diagonal cuts that maintain a consistent, mechanical rhythm.
Best suited to display applications where its angular construction and slanted stance can carry personality—headlines, posters, product naming, team or event branding, and gaming/tech interfaces. It can work for short bursts of text (taglines, labels, UI headings), but its dense geometry and sharp internal angles favor larger sizes and tighter, punchier messaging.
The overall tone is fast, technical, and assertive—more "engineered" than friendly. Its sharp angles and forward slant suggest motion and performance, giving it a futuristic, motorsport-like energy. The faceted shapes also lend a slightly tactical, industrial mood that feels at home in high-impact, synthetic contexts.
The font appears designed to deliver a high-impact, motion-forward sans for modern branding, emphasizing speed, precision, and a modular industrial aesthetic. Its consistent use of chamfers and straightened curves suggests an intention to feel machine-cut and performance-oriented rather than neutral or humanist.
Diagonal joins and clipped corners create distinctive silhouettes that pop at display sizes, while the strong internal angles can become dense in smaller text. The design maintains a consistent visual system across caps, lowercase, and numerals, emphasizing hard edges and directional slant over softness or calligraphic nuance.