Sans Other Syle 3 is a light, very wide, monoline, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, logotypes, posters, ui titles, tech branding, futuristic, techno, digital, modular, industrial, sci‑fi styling, technical feel, modular construction, display impact, rectilinear, angular, geometric, sharp, open counters.
A geometric sans with a rectilinear, modular construction built from straight strokes and crisp angles. Curves are largely replaced by squared corners and chamfered joins, creating octagonal and rectangular bowls in letters like O, D, P, and Q. Strokes stay consistent throughout, with a deliberately engineered rhythm and frequent use of open forms and segmented joins (notably in C, G, S, and several lowercase shapes). The overall silhouette is expansive with generous horizontal span, while counters and apertures remain clean and mechanically defined.
Best suited to display applications such as headlines, branding wordmarks, game/film titles, posters, and UI or product naming where a technical aesthetic is desired. It can also work for labels, packaging accents, and environmental graphics when used at sizes that preserve the segmented details and open apertures.
The font conveys a futuristic, technical tone—more "interface" and "hardware" than editorial. Its gridlike geometry and squared terminals read as synthetic and systematic, evoking sci‑fi display typography, industrial labeling, and digital instrumentation.
The design intention appears to be a contemporary, techno-flavored sans that prioritizes a constructed, machine-like geometry over conventional humanist reading cues. Its systematic straight-line vocabulary suggests it was drawn to signal modernity, precision, and a digital or industrial context.
Distinctive glyph decisions emphasize modularity: the Q uses a squared bowl with a short internal tail, the G is constructed with a horizontal bar and open interior, and the lowercase set mirrors the same rectilinear logic with simplified, schematic forms. The result is highly stylized and most comfortable in short bursts where its angular details can register clearly.