Pixel Other Nohy 1 is a regular weight, narrow, medium contrast, italic, normal x-height font.
Keywords: display, headlines, ui labels, posters, title cards, techy, retro, instrumental, cryptic, utilitarian, display impact, digital readout, retro tech styling, modular construction, segmented, octagonal, faceted, angular, monolinear.
A segmented, faceted display design built from straight strokes with clipped, chamfered terminals, giving each glyph an octagonal, module-like skeleton. Curves are implied through angled segments, producing tight counters and sharp interior corners, while stroke weight stays largely uniform across the set. Many forms lean and taper through their segment joins, creating an energetic rhythm and a slightly irregular, constructed texture in running text. The punctuation and figures follow the same segmented logic, with numerals reading clearly in a digital, panel-like style.
Best suited for short display settings such as headlines, posters, title cards, UI labels, and numeric readouts where its segmented construction is a feature rather than a distraction. It also works well for thematic branding in tech, sci‑fi, gaming, or instrumentation-inspired graphics, especially when paired with simpler text faces for body copy.
The overall tone feels technical and retro-futuristic, evoking electronic readouts, lab instruments, and arcade-era interfaces. Its crisp angles and segmented construction add a coded, mechanical personality that reads as precise yet stylized.
The design appears intended to translate segment-display logic into a typographic alphabet, preserving the modular feel of electronic digits while extending it to uppercase, lowercase, and punctuation. It prioritizes a recognizable constructed aesthetic and strong visual identity in display contexts.
At text sizes the segmented joins and angled terminals become a prominent surface detail, so spacing and line breaks play a big role in legibility. The design’s distinctive construction makes it most effective when given room to breathe rather than set too tightly.