Sans Other Ohma 4 is a bold, normal width, low contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: posters, headlines, logos, packaging, gaming ui, industrial, techy, playful, arcade, mechanical, display impact, retro tech, industrial feel, logo shapes, angular, blocky, squared, chamfered, compressed caps.
A chunky, geometric sans built from squared forms and straight strokes, with frequent chamfered corners that soften the otherwise boxy construction. Counters tend to be rectangular (notably in O, D, P, and 0), and many joins resolve into crisp right angles, giving the alphabet a machined, modular feel. Proportions are slightly irregular across glyphs, with some letters showing subtle width shifts and uneven terminals that read as intentionally rugged rather than strictly grid-perfect. The lowercase is compact and simplified, with single-storey shapes and sturdy stems; figures follow the same squared, stencil-like logic with open, angular turns on forms like 2, 5, and 7.
Well-suited to posters, headlines, and branding where a hard-edged geometric voice is desirable. It can also work for packaging, labels, and gaming or tech-themed UI elements that benefit from a blocky, retro-industrial texture, particularly at medium-to-large sizes.
The overall tone is assertive and utilitarian, but with a game-like, quirky edge created by the chiseled corners and slightly offbeat rhythm. It suggests retro-digital signage and arcade-era display lettering, balancing toughness with a hint of hand-cut character.
The font appears designed to deliver a sturdy, squared-off display voice with a manufactured, cut-metal aesthetic, while introducing small irregularities to avoid a sterile, purely grid-based look. Its emphasis on angular counters and chamfered corners points to attention-grabbing titling and emblematic wordmarks rather than long-form reading.
The design’s rectangular counters and blunt terminals keep interiors open and legible at display sizes, while the angular notches and occasional asymmetries add texture in headline settings. Uppercase and numerals feel especially emblematic and logo-ready due to their strong silhouettes.