Sans Other Pejo 3 is a bold, very wide, low contrast, italic, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, logos, posters, gaming, sports, futuristic, tech, racing, sci-fi, mechanical, futurism, speed, display impact, tech branding, stylization, rounded corners, chamfered, streamlined, angular, extended.
A streamlined, extended sans with a pronounced forward slant and monoline construction. Letterforms are built from squared, softly rounded strokes with frequent chamfers and open counters, creating a segmented, engineered feel rather than traditional curves. Terminals tend to be cut on angles, bowls are squarish, and curves are tightened into geometric arcs, producing a crisp, high-speed rhythm across words. The overall silhouette reads wide and low, with compact apertures and consistent stroke thickness that keeps the texture even in dense settings.
Best suited to short-form display use such as headlines, brand marks, event graphics, gaming UI, and sports or automotive-themed posters where its wide stance and forward-leaning construction can communicate speed and technology. It will be most effective at medium-to-large sizes where the angular details and compact counters remain clear.
The design projects a futuristic, motorsport-adjacent attitude—fast, technical, and display-driven. Its angled cuts and aerodynamic shapes evoke industrial interfaces, vehicle branding, and sci-fi titling rather than neutral editorial typography.
The font appears intended as a stylized techno display sans that prioritizes motion, width, and geometric consistency. Its engineered cuts and squared curves suggest a goal of creating a cohesive, futuristic voice for branding and titling rather than a general-purpose text face.
Distinctive, stylized joins and open forms give the alphabet a custom-drawn look, especially in diagonals and curved letters where the geometry stays rigid and squared. The numerals follow the same extended, cut-corner logic for a cohesive set, and the overall word shapes emphasize motion through the persistent slant and horizontal emphasis.