Sans Other Waki 11 is a bold, very wide, medium contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, logos, posters, game ui, packaging, techno, futuristic, arcade, industrial, mechanical, sci-fi display, modular construction, interface styling, industrial tone, high impact, square, angular, modular, monoline, boxy.
A square, modular sans with heavy, uniform strokes and crisp right-angle corners. Forms are built from rectilinear segments with frequent cut-ins and stencil-like gaps that create inner counters as slots or rectangular windows. Curves are largely suppressed in favor of hard geometry, while diagonals appear as blunt, chamfered joins on letters like K, V, W, X, Y, and Z. The overall texture is dense and rhythmic, with consistent stroke thickness and compact apertures that emphasize a constructed, machine-drawn feel.
Best suited to short, prominent settings where its geometric construction can read clearly: headlines, logos and wordmarks, posters, game/interface graphics, and tech-themed packaging. It can also work for signage-style labels or section headers where a mechanical, modular voice is desired, while longer body copy may feel visually heavy and patterned.
The font projects a distinctly futuristic, techno tone—more display-oriented than conversational. Its rigid geometry and cut-out detailing evoke digital interfaces, arcade and sci-fi titling, and utilitarian industrial labeling. The overall mood is assertive and engineered, with a slightly retro-computer flavor in the squared bowls and segmented strokes.
The design appears intended to deliver a highly constructed, futuristic display voice using a modular, right-angled toolkit. Its cut-out counters and segmented strokes prioritize theme and texture, aiming for a sci-fi/industrial impression and strong presence at larger sizes.
Many glyphs use interior voids as design features (e.g., rectangular counters in A, B, O, P, R) and occasional baseline extensions or underscored elements in select characters, reinforcing a technical, sign-like aesthetic. Numerals follow the same rectilinear logic, reading like simplified digital modules rather than traditional lining figures.