Sans Other Orna 3 is a very bold, wide, monoline, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, logotypes, gaming, ui titles, futuristic, techno, industrial, arcade, sci‑fi, impact, tech styling, machine aesthetic, branding, geometric, angular, squared, modular, chamfered.
A geometric, block-built sans with heavy, monoline strokes and squared proportions. Letterforms are constructed from straight segments with frequent chamfered corners and occasional triangular notches, giving the silhouettes a cut, engineered feel rather than rounded smoothness. Counters are mostly rectangular and compact, and many characters use stencil-like breaks or horizontal slots (notably in E, e, and some numerals), creating a segmented rhythm. The overall texture is dense and punchy, with tight internal spaces and crisp, high-contrast edges that stay consistent across caps, lowercase, and figures.
Best suited for display applications where its angular, high-impact shapes can be read at larger sizes—headlines, posters, branding marks, game titles, and interface headers. It can also work for short labels or packaging callouts where a technical, machined aesthetic is desired, but the compact counters and stencil-like breaks suggest avoiding long passages at small sizes.
The font projects a bold, mechanical tone that reads as futuristic and game-influenced. Its modular construction and sliced details evoke industrial labeling, sci‑fi interfaces, and arcade-era display typography, prioritizing impact and attitude over softness.
The design appears intended to deliver a strongly geometric, hard-edged display voice with a distinct techno signature. By combining square construction with consistent chamfers and segmented interior bars, it aims to feel engineered and futuristic while remaining recognizably sans and highly graphic.
Distinctive cut-ins and segmented bars add personality but also create a strong patterning effect in running text, especially where repeated horizontals appear. The lowercase closely echoes the angular logic of the caps, keeping a uniform voice across mixed-case settings.