Sans Other Romo 2 is a bold, normal width, monoline, upright, tall x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, logotypes, posters, packaging, labels, techno, industrial, sci‑fi, game ui, retro digital, futuristic tone, geometric display, industrial labeling, digital aesthetic, angular, octagonal, square, modular, stencil‑like.
A geometric, square-built sans with sharply cut corners and consistent stroke weight. Forms are constructed from straight segments and chamfered angles, creating octagonal counters and a rigid, grid-based rhythm. Curves are largely avoided in favor of hard turns; joins and terminals are blunt and mechanical. The lowercase mirrors the same modular logic, with compact, boxy bowls and simplified diagonals, producing a tightly engineered texture in text.
Best suited to display settings where its angular geometry can be appreciated: headlines, branding marks, posters, and product or equipment-style labeling. It can also work for interface titles or short callouts in tech and gaming contexts; for extended reading, larger sizes and generous spacing will help preserve clarity.
The overall tone is technical and assertive, evoking digital hardware, industrial labeling, and sci‑fi interfaces. Its angular construction reads as purposeful and utilitarian, with a retro-futurist edge that feels at home in electronic or game-adjacent aesthetics.
The design intention appears to be a contemporary, geometric display sans that prioritizes a strict, faceted construction over traditional curve-based letterforms. By limiting shapes to straight segments and chamfered corners, it aims to deliver a distinctive techno-industrial voice with strong visual consistency across caps, lowercase, and numerals.
Capitals and figures appear especially strong and signage-like due to their squared silhouettes and wide internal cutouts. Diagonal strokes (seen in letters like K, V, W, X, Y) are rendered as clean, straight facets rather than smooth transitions, reinforcing the font’s machined, modular character.