Serif Other Ubji 11 is a regular weight, normal width, monoline, upright, short x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, branding, posters, titles, packaging, techno, futuristic, angular, retro, display impact, futurist styling, geometric system, brand voice, octagonal, chamfered, high contrast shapes, geometric, stylized serifs.
A geometric, monoline serif design built from squared and octagonal forms with frequent chamfered corners. Strokes maintain an even weight, while terminals finish in sharp, wedge-like notches and short, stylized serifs that add a slightly calligraphic edge to an otherwise engineered construction. Bowls and counters tend toward rectangular shapes with softened corners, and curves are minimized or rendered as segmented arcs. Proportions feel compact in the lowercase with a notably short x-height and relatively tall ascenders, while capitals read wide and architectural. Overall spacing appears steady, with a crisp, modular rhythm across letters and numerals.
Best suited to display settings where its angular details and stylized serifs can be appreciated—headlines, titles, logos, and short promotional copy. It can also work for tech-leaning branding, game or film titling, and packaging that benefits from a futuristic, geometric voice rather than long-form reading.
The font conveys a sci‑fi, instrument-panel tone with a hint of retro arcade signage. Its sharp terminals and faceted geometry feel technical and deliberate, giving text a sleek, futuristic presence while still nodding to classical serif structure.
The design appears intended to fuse serif conventions with a modular, polygonal construction, prioritizing a distinctive, high-tech silhouette over traditional text neutrality. Its consistent stroke system and repeated chamfer motifs suggest a goal of strong visual identity and immediate recognizability in display sizes.
Distinctive features include the pointed, split-like terminals on verticals, the angular joins in letters like K, M, N, and W, and squared bowls in O/Q and numerals that reinforce the faceted system. The italic is not present; the style remains consistently upright and structured across the sample text.