Sans Other Yose 3 is a bold, narrow, medium contrast, upright, short x-height font visually similar to 'Designator' by TEKNIKE (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: headlines, logos, posters, game ui, titles, techno, retro, industrial, sci-fi, futuristic, constructed, impact, display-led, tech branding, square, angular, modular, geometric, pixel-like.
A compact, modular sans built from squared strokes and hard 90° turns, with occasional 45° chamfers that sharpen corners and terminals. Counters are mostly rectangular, and curves are minimized or faceted, giving letters a machined, constructed feel. Stroke endings are blunt and flat, with consistent, blocky rhythm; several forms (notably diagonals and joins) resolve into stepped or notched shapes rather than smooth transitions. Proportions are tight and utilitarian, with a low lowercase profile and tall, rigid capitals that read as assembled from straight segments.
Best suited to display roles where its angular silhouette can be appreciated: headings, branding wordmarks, posters, and on-screen UI elements for games or tech-themed projects. It can also work for short labels, packaging callouts, or signage-style text where a rigid, engineered look is desired.
The overall tone is technical and retro-futuristic, reminiscent of arcade interfaces, terminal readouts, and industrial labeling. Its angular construction conveys a crisp, engineered attitude—assertive, schematic, and slightly dystopian in flavor. The faceted geometry and squared counters reinforce a synthetic, display-led personality rather than a humanist one.
The design appears intended to deliver a futuristic, constructed sans aesthetic with strong modular geometry and high impact. By replacing curves with faceted corners and squared counters, it aims for a distinctive, machine-coded voice that stands out in titles and interface-like typography.
Distinctive geometric decisions—like squared bowls, boxy apertures, and occasional stencil-like internal breaks—create strong letterform identity, especially at larger sizes. The design favors sharp silhouettes and dense texture, which can feel busy in long passages but very intentional in headlines and UI-like settings.