Sans Normal Onduh 2 is a bold, normal width, low contrast, upright, normal x-height, monospaced font visually similar to 'FF Letter Gothic Mono' by FontFont, 'TheSans Mono' by LucasFonts, 'Core Sans N SC' and 'Core Sans NR' by S-Core, and 'Biphoton' by Typodermic (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: code, ui labels, data tables, terminal, packaging, utilitarian, industrial, retro, technical, robust, alignment, clarity, utility, impact, consistency, blocky, geometric, compact, sturdy, ink-trap-free.
A heavy, monospaced sans with compact, geometric construction and firmly squared-off terminals. Curves are broad and controlled, with rounded bowls that stay close to the grid, while many joins and corners read as slightly softened rather than sharply pointed. Counters are relatively small for the weight, producing a dense, high-impact texture; apertures are tight and strokes maintain an even, consistent rhythm across the set. The lowercase is straightforward and workmanlike, with a two-storey "a", single-storey "g", and simple, sturdy forms that prioritize uniform spacing and alignment.
Well suited to code snippets, terminal-style UI, status readouts, and data tables where fixed character widths are essential. It can also work for packaging, stamps, and bold labels that benefit from a dense, uniform typographic block, especially in short lines or headlines.
The overall tone feels utilitarian and mechanical, with a no-nonsense presence that recalls signage, labeling, and typewriter-era pragmatism. Its dense, blocky color gives it an assertive voice that can feel industrial or retro-technical depending on context.
The design appears intended to deliver a sturdy monospaced voice with a clean, modern sans skeleton and a compact footprint, optimizing for alignment, repeatable rhythm, and strong visibility. It emphasizes consistency and robustness over delicate detail, aiming for practical readability and a distinct technical character.
The monospaced fit creates a strong vertical cadence in text, and the heavy weight makes whitespace and counters a key legibility factor at smaller sizes. Numerals match the same compact, grid-driven logic, reading clearly as solid, upright forms suited to tabular alignment.