Sans Other Rylom 1 is a regular weight, wide, medium contrast, italic, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, logos, gaming ui, sports branding, techno, angular, sporty, futuristic, assertive, futurism, motion, impact, tech styling, display utility, chamfered, faceted, mechanical, compressed joins, sharp terminals.
A slanted, angular sans with faceted outlines and frequent chamfered corners. Strokes are mostly monolinear with subtle modulation created by angled joins rather than true calligraphic contrast. Counters tend toward squarish polygons, and many curves are approximated with straight segments, producing a crisp, mechanical rhythm. Terminals are sharp and clipped, and the overall construction feels deliberately geometric with occasional irregularities in contour that add a slightly hand-cut, stencil-like edge.
Best suited to display applications where its angular detailing can read clearly: headlines, posters, wordmarks, esports/gaming interfaces, and sports or tech-forward branding. It can work for short bursts of copy or UI labels, but is likely most effective when given space, size, and generous line spacing.
The font projects a fast, technical tone—more “engineered” than friendly. Its sharp angles and forward slant suggest motion and competitiveness, giving it a sporty, sci‑fi flavor suited to high-energy branding.
The design appears intended to translate a futuristic, speed-driven aesthetic into a utilitarian sans structure—using clipped corners and polygonal curves to create a distinct, high-impact voice while remaining recognizable and consistent across the basic character set.
The sample text shows strong word-shape presence at display sizes, but the faceting and tight interior angles can visually clutter in dense paragraphs. Numerals and capitals share the same polygonal logic, reinforcing a consistent, engineered voice across alphanumerics.