Sans Other Peka 14 is a regular weight, very wide, medium contrast, italic, tall x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, branding, sportswear, gaming, sci-fi ui, futuristic, technical, speedy, sporty, angular, display impact, tech aesthetic, motion cue, branding voice, oblique, extended, chiseled, monolinear, square-rounded.
A sharply oblique, extended sans with a squared, techno skeleton and consistent, mostly monolinear strokes. Curves are restrained and often rendered as softened corners, producing boxy counters in letters like O and D and a geometric, cut-metal feel throughout. Terminals are frequently sheared into wedges or flat chamfers, and several forms use horizontal “slices” or notches that read as engineered detailing, especially in S, G, and the numerals. The lowercase keeps a tall, sturdy presence with compact bowls and a single-storey a, while overall spacing and rhythm emphasize forward motion and a clean, mechanical cadence.
Best used for short, prominent text: headlines, logos/wordmarks, posters, and product or vehicle-style graphics where a high-tech or performance cue is desired. It also suits interface titling for sci‑fi or gaming contexts, scoreboard-style applications, and packaging where sharp geometry and forward slant help convey speed and precision.
The design reads as fast, modern, and technology-forward, with a racing/industrial tone rather than a neutral text voice. Its angled stance and faceted endings suggest motion, precision, and performance, giving it a confident, slightly aggressive energy suited to contemporary sci‑fi and sports aesthetics.
The likely intention is an attention-grabbing display sans that blends geometric construction with engineered cuts to communicate motion and modernity. By combining extended proportions, a built-in oblique stance, and squared forms, it aims to deliver a distinctive techno voice that remains clean and legible in large, bold settings.
Distinctive construction details—like the squared counters, clipped joins, and segmented horizontals—create strong personality but also a busy texture at smaller sizes. The oblique angle is integral to the design, so it visually “leans into” layouts and benefits from generous line spacing when used in longer phrases.