Sans Other Sejy 6 is a regular weight, narrow, low contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, ui labels, posters, tech branding, wayfinding, tech, industrial, retro, utilitarian, game ui, constructed look, digital feel, industrial clarity, retro futurism, square, angular, monoline, condensed, geometric.
A square, angular sans built from straight strokes and hard 90° corners, with a consistent monoline weight and no flaring or calligraphic modulation. Counters tend toward rectangular forms and openings are often narrow, giving the letters a compact, engineered rhythm. Diagonals are used sparingly and feel planar and sharp, while curves are largely replaced by chamfered or boxy constructions. The overall texture is tight and crisp, with distinctly mechanical proportions and a slightly modular, pixel-adjacent feel.
Best suited to display sizes where its squared detailing stays clear: headlines, product or tech branding, interface labels, posters, and signage-style applications. It can also work for short text blocks when a distinctly digital/industrial voice is desired, though its tight apertures and geometric rigidity may feel dense in extended reading.
The font reads as technical and utilitarian, evoking digital interfaces, industrial labeling, and retro-futuristic display typography. Its rigid geometry and squared curves create a cool, controlled tone that feels systematic rather than expressive.
The design appears intended to deliver a distinctive, constructed sans voice that prioritizes crisp geometry and a machine-made aesthetic. It aims to balance legibility with a strong stylistic signature reminiscent of digital-era and industrial typographic systems.
Distinctive constructions—such as the boxy bowls, the squared ‘O’/‘0’, and the notched or cut-in terminals on several letters—push it into a stylized, constructed sans territory while remaining legible. Numerals and capitals share the same rectilinear logic, supporting a consistent, schematic look across mixed-case settings.