Sans Other Jihe 1 is a bold, wide, monoline, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: display, headlines, posters, logos, packaging, techno, arcade, industrial, futuristic, modular, tech aesthetic, digital voice, systematic forms, impactful display, angular, rectilinear, squared, blocky, compact counters.
A rectilinear, modular sans built from straight strokes and sharp corners, with a strongly geometric, grid-fit construction. Forms are predominantly squared with occasional 45° cuts, producing a crisp, mechanical rhythm. Counters tend to be boxy and compact, and curves are largely avoided in favor of right angles, giving letters a stencil-like, engineered feel without true breaks in the strokes. The lowercase echoes the uppercase logic, with simplified, single-storey structures and boxy bowls, while numerals follow the same square, segmented geometry for a consistent texture in text.
Best suited to display settings where its angular geometry can be appreciated: headlines, posters, tech-themed branding, and logo wordmarks. It can also work for short UI labels, product names, and packaging accents where a digital/industrial voice is desired, though its compact counters suggest avoiding very small sizes for dense copy.
The overall tone is distinctly digital and machine-made, evoking retro game interfaces, sci-fi labeling, and industrial control-panel typography. Its hard angles and modular economy read as assertive and technical, with a slightly playful 8-bit/arcade edge when set large.
The design appears intended to deliver a clean, modular techno aesthetic with consistent, grid-based letter construction. By minimizing curves and relying on squared counters and angled terminals, it aims for a strong, contemporary digital voice that remains highly structured and visually distinctive.
Diagonal elements are used sparingly as functional cuts rather than as flowing curves, which keeps the texture rigid and orderly. The design maintains strong uniformity across letters and numbers, emphasizing an engineered, system-like appearance that stays visually stable in all-caps and mixed-case settings.