Sans Other Rowe 14 is a bold, normal width, monoline, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: posters, headlines, logos, signage, gaming ui, techno, industrial, arcade, mechanical, futuristic, digital aesthetic, impact, modularity, angular, boxy, geometric, stencil-like, compact.
A heavy, angular sans with squared counters, clipped corners, and mostly straight strokes that favor hard right angles over curves. Letterforms feel constructed from modular blocks, with occasional diagonal cuts (notably in K, V, W, X, Y) that add sharp rhythm without softening the overall rigidity. Counters tend to be rectangular and tight, terminals are blunt, and joins are abrupt, creating a dense, high-contrast silhouette against the page despite the monoline structure. Figures follow the same boxy logic, with the 0 rendered as a squared form with an internal rectangular counter and numerals built from stacked bars and notched corners.
Best suited to display sizes where its angular construction and squared counters can be appreciated—posters, headlines, title cards, logos, and bold labels. It also works well for tech-leaning interfaces or gaming-themed graphics where a mechanical, modular voice is desired, while long-form text may feel dense due to the tight apertures and strong blocky repetition.
The tone is utilitarian and digital, evoking UI labels, arcade cabinets, sci‑fi signage, and machine-panel lettering. Its squared geometry reads confident and forceful, with a crisp, no-nonsense voice that leans more synthetic than humanist.
The design appears intended to deliver a compact, constructed sans aesthetic that reads as engineered and digital-forward. Its consistent straight-stroke logic and notched details suggest a deliberate move away from natural curves toward a modular, industrial display personality.
The texture in paragraph settings is strongly rhythmic due to repeated right-angle motifs and tight apertures, producing a distinctly pixel-adjacent feel without being strictly grid-based. Some glyphs use small notches and cut-ins that create a slightly stencil-like, engineered character, especially noticeable in the uppercase set and the numerals.