Sans Other Syda 6 is a regular weight, very wide, monoline, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, logos, packaging, ui display, techno, sci-fi, futuristic, industrial, digital, futuristic branding, interface styling, geometric display, tech signaling, angular, squared, geometric, modular, octagonal.
A geometric sans with a modular, squared construction and consistently straight strokes. Corners are hard and often chamfered, producing octagonal counters and rounded-by-cuts joins rather than curves. Proportions are expansive with long horizontals and wide bowls, while stroke endings stay crisp and flat. The design relies on a small set of repeating forms—boxy ovals, open apertures, and angular diagonals—creating a coherent, engineered rhythm across letters and figures.
Best suited to display settings where the geometric styling can read clearly: headlines, posters, brand marks, product packaging, and large UI or dashboard labels. It also works well for short technical strings (model names, game titles, interface headings) where a futuristic tone is desired, while extended small-size text may feel rigid and attention-grabbing.
The overall tone feels technical and forward-looking, with a distinctly digital, hardware-like flavor. Its rigid geometry and cut-corner styling suggest interfaces, machinery, and sci-fi environments rather than editorial warmth. The even stroke presence and wide stance give it a confident, display-oriented voice.
The font appears designed to translate a digital/industrial aesthetic into a clean sans system by building letters from straight, repeatable parts and chamfered corners. The intention seems to balance legibility with a distinctive, constructed silhouette that immediately signals technology and modernity.
Several characters use intentionally simplified structures with open terminals and squared counters, reinforcing a constructed, schematic feel. Numerals echo the same boxy geometry, helping mixed alphanumeric strings look uniform and purpose-built.