Sans Other Mylip 6 is a very bold, normal width, low contrast, upright, tall x-height font visually similar to 'Stallman Round' by Par Défaut and 'Joygist' by Wildan Type (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: posters, headlines, logos, game ui, packaging, industrial, retro arcade, techno, assertive, mechanical, maximum impact, retro tech, industrial labeling, display clarity, blocky, squared, stencil-like, notched, angular.
A heavy, squared display sans built from compact rectangular masses with hard corners and occasional chamfered cuts. Counters are small and often reduced to tight vertical slots, while joins and terminals show deliberate notches and step-like cut-ins that create a pseudo-stencil rhythm without fully breaking strokes. Proportions favor a tall lowercase with short extenders, producing a dense, stacked texture in text. Spacing appears tight-to-moderate, and the overall silhouette reads as modular and engineered rather than calligraphic or geometric-perfect.
Best suited to large-scale display work where its tight counters and carved detailing remain clear: posters, title treatments, branding marks, game/tech UI headings, and product packaging. It can also work for short labels, badges, or wayfinding-style graphics when set with generous size and sufficient tracking.
The tone is forceful and machine-made, with a distinctly retro-digital flavor reminiscent of arcade titles, sci-fi interfaces, and industrial labeling. Its chunky shapes and carved notches give it a rugged, fabricated feel—confident, loud, and slightly militaristic.
The design appears intended to deliver maximum impact through dense, modular letterforms and a distinctive notched construction, combining a utilitarian block aesthetic with retro-futuristic display character for attention-first typography.
Distinctive angular cutouts and intermittent interior “windows” create strong letter differentiation at display sizes, but the small counters and compact apertures can close up visually in longer lines or smaller settings. The figure set matches the same block logic, yielding bold, attention-grabbing numerals suited to headings and signage-style compositions.