Sans Other Rebal 10 is a very bold, narrow, monoline, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, logotypes, game ui, signage, industrial, techno, arcade, utilitarian, retro-futurist, digital aesthetic, impactful display, modular construction, compact fit, rectilinear, angular, modular, square terminals, condensed rhythm.
A compact, rectilinear display sans built from consistent, monoline strokes with hard right-angle turns and squared terminals. Counters are mostly rectangular and tightly enclosed, with crisp internal corners and minimal curvature. Proportions are condensed with a steady vertical emphasis, while widths vary slightly by character; curves (like in C, S, and G) resolve into faceted, stepped forms rather than true arcs. The overall texture is dense and high-contrast in figure/ground due to the heavy fill and small apertures.
Best suited to short text where its dense, angular forms can read as a deliberate stylistic choice: headlines, poster typography, branding marks, game/arcade interfaces, and bold signage. It can also work for labels or dashboards when used with generous tracking and clear size to preserve the tight apertures.
The font conveys a strict, engineered tone that reads as digital and mechanical. Its gridlike construction and sharp geometry evoke arcade UI, sci‑fi signage, and industrial labeling, producing a confident, no-nonsense voice with a retro electronic edge.
The design appears intended to translate a geometric, grid-based construction into a bold, compact display face, prioritizing a mechanical, digital feel over conventional readability at small sizes. It emphasizes uniform stroke logic and sharp, modular curves to create a coherent techno-industrial voice.
Distinctive shapes include a rectangular, boxed look in many bowls (O, P, D) and a notably squared, modular treatment of curves in letters like S and G. The numerals follow the same blocky logic, with straight segments and clipped angles that reinforce a technical, display-oriented character.