Sans Other Jise 5 is a regular weight, very wide, monoline, upright, normal x-height font visually similar to 'Imagine Font' by Jens Isensee (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: headlines, logotypes, posters, ui labels, packaging, tech, futuristic, modular, mechanical, sci-fi, futuristic display, tech branding, systematic geometry, retro sci-fi, rectilinear, angular, octagonal, geometric, squared.
A geometric, rectilinear sans built from consistent monoline strokes and squared-off curves. Forms rely on right angles, flat terminals, and occasional chamfered corners that create an octagonal, machined feel. Counters are generally boxy and open, with simple, constructed joins and a slightly modular rhythm. The overall silhouette is broad and stable, with generous horizontal spans and a crisp, grid-aligned texture in text.
Best suited to display sizes where its geometric details and chamfered corners stay crisp—headlines, branding marks, game or film titles, tech packaging, and interface or control-panel style labels. It can work for short paragraphs when ample size and spacing are available, but its constructed shapes read most confidently in shorter runs.
The font conveys a technical, sci‑fi tone—clean, engineered, and deliberately synthetic. Its squared geometry and cut corners feel like interface lettering, instrumentation labels, or retro-futurist display typography, projecting precision and control rather than warmth or calligraphy.
The design appears intended to deliver a distinctive, futuristic sans voice through modular, square-based geometry—prioritizing a consistent engineered look and strong silhouette over traditional humanist softness.
Distinctive construction shows up in letters like the angled diagonals of K and X, the sharp V-shaped vertex, and the boxy bowls in B/P/R. The numerals share the same squared geometry, giving a cohesive, system-like voice across alphanumerics.