Sans Other Ohri 1 is a very bold, narrow, monoline, upright, tall x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, logos, gaming, packaging, industrial, gothic, techno, aggressive, retro, impact, branding, tech styling, gothic edge, space-saving, angular, faceted, blocky, condensed, high-contrast negative.
A compact, angular display sans built from heavy, uniform strokes and crisp right angles. Counters are tight and often squared-off, with distinctive triangular notches and clipped terminals that create a chiseled, faceted silhouette. Curves are largely avoided in favor of stepped or straight-sided forms, producing a mechanical rhythm and strong vertical emphasis. The lowercase echoes the uppercase structure with simplified, geometric bowls and minimal modulation, while figures and punctuation maintain the same cut, stencil-like logic for a cohesive texture in lines of text.
Best suited for short, high-impact settings such as posters, game/UI titling, album or event branding, and logo wordmarks where the angular detailing can be appreciated. It can also work for packaging and product labels that want a rugged, industrial tone, but is less comfortable for long passages due to its dense internal spaces and aggressive geometry.
The overall tone is hard-edged and assertive, combining a blackletter-like severity with a futuristic, arcade-industrial feel. Its sharp cuts and compact spacing read as tactical and mechanical, giving headlines a forceful, high-impact voice with a slightly retro, game-title energy.
The design appears intended to deliver maximum presence with a compact footprint, using chiseled terminals and squared counters to evoke engineered, hard-surface forms. It aims for a distinctive display voice that bridges gothic rigidity and techno styling while staying clean and sans in construction.
Several glyphs incorporate pointed interior cuts and wedge-like joins that can visually connect across adjacent letters, creating a dense, unified word shape. At smaller sizes the tight counters and sharp notches may merge into a darker texture, while at larger sizes the distinctive cuts become a key stylistic feature.