Sans Other Urke 3 is a very light, normal width, monoline, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, logotypes, ui labels, game titles, futuristic, technical, minimal, geometric, sci‑fi, sci‑fi styling, tech branding, geometric system, display impact, angular, squared, octagonal, wireframe, modular.
A very light, monoline display sans built from straight strokes with crisp, angular joins and squared corners. Letterforms lean heavily on rectangular and octagonal construction, with frequent 45° cuts and open, segmented contours (notably in forms like C, G, S, and several lowercase shapes). Curves are largely avoided; counters tend to be boxy, and terminals are blunt and clean. Spacing and proportions feel deliberately engineered, producing a consistent, grid-like rhythm while still allowing some character-to-character width variation.
Best suited to headlines, short phrases, and branded titling where the angular construction can be appreciated. It works well for sci‑fi or tech-themed identities, interface labels, and on-screen graphics, and can add a retro-digital flavor to posters and packaging. For long-form text, its thin strokes and segmented forms are likely more effective at larger sizes with generous spacing.
The overall tone reads futuristic and technical, evoking control panels, schematics, and retro digital interfaces. Its spare strokes and sharp geometry give it a cool, precise personality that feels more design-led than neutral.
The design intent appears to be a stylized, geometric sans that prioritizes a modular, futuristic silhouette over conventional readability. By limiting curves and emphasizing straight segments and chamfered corners, it aims to deliver a distinctive techno voice while maintaining a coherent, system-like structure across uppercase, lowercase, and numerals.
The lowercase set mirrors the uppercase geometry closely, which can create strong stylistic unity but also reduces traditional case contrast in running text. Several glyphs use open breaks and unconventional stroke continuity, adding a constructed, “assembled” look that is distinctive at larger sizes.