Sans Other Ipro 11 is a bold, wide, monoline, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: posters, headlines, logos, gaming, film titles, futuristic, techno, industrial, aggressive, sci-fi, display impact, sci-fi styling, mechanical texture, branding distinctiveness, headline voice, angular, faceted, chiseled, geometric, sharp.
A heavy, geometric display sans built from straight, monoline strokes with frequent angled cuts and chamfered corners. Many terminals end in triangular notches or wedge-like shears, creating a faceted, machined silhouette. Counters are generally compact and squarish, with occasional stencil-like interruptions and asymmetric cuts that give letters a dynamic, carved-in feel. The overall rhythm is tight and blocky, with simplified forms and intentionally idiosyncratic constructions that emphasize shape over conventional typographic modulation.
Best suited for short, high-impact settings such as posters, title cards, esports/gaming graphics, sci‑fi packaging, and tech-forward branding. It performs particularly well where sharp geometry and a mechanical texture can be a feature, not a distraction—large sizes, high contrast, and spacious layouts help the forms read cleanly.
The font projects a high-energy, mechanical tone with a distinctly sci‑fi/techno attitude. Its sharp facets and cut-in details feel assertive and weaponized, evoking robotics, cyberpunk interfaces, and angular industrial branding. The personality reads as bold and commanding rather than neutral or text-oriented.
The design appears intended to deliver an angular, futuristic display voice by combining monoline construction with aggressive chamfers and wedge-cut terminals. Its unconventional details prioritize a distinctive silhouette and thematic atmosphere, aiming to feel engineered and contemporary rather than classically typographic.
The strongest visual signature is the consistent use of diagonal slicing and notch motifs across both uppercase and lowercase, which helps maintain cohesion in headlines. The sample text shows that these cutaways remain legible at larger sizes but create a busy texture in longer passages, reinforcing its role as a display face rather than a body-text workhorse.