Sans Other Nyse 6 is a very bold, wide, low contrast, upright, tall x-height font.
Keywords: posters, headlines, logos, gaming, packaging, arcade, industrial, techno, futuristic, brutalist, impact, retro tech, modular, signage, square, blocky, pixel-like, geometric, stencil-like.
A heavy, geometric sans with predominantly squared silhouettes, flat terminals, and minimal modulation. Counters are often small and rectilinear, with several letters using cut-in notches and inner “window” shapes that create a constructed, almost modular feel. Curves, where present, are reduced to broad chamfers and quarter-rounds, giving the forms a crisp, engineered rhythm. The lowercase is compact and boxy with simplified bowls and apertures, and figures follow the same hard-edged, built-from-blocks logic for strong consistency in texture.
Best suited to short headlines, posters, logotypes, game titles, and packaging where a strong, blocky texture is desirable. It also works well for techno/industrial branding, signage-style graphics, and UI-style hero text when used at ample sizes and with comfortable spacing.
The overall tone is assertive and mechanical, evoking arcade-era display type, industrial labeling, and sci‑fi interface graphics. Its dense, angular presence reads bold and confrontational, with a distinctly digital, fabricated character rather than a neutral contemporary voice.
The design appears intended to deliver maximum visual impact through squared geometry and modular, cut-out construction. It prioritizes a distinctive, machine-made voice and consistent, engineered shapes over softness or text-centric readability.
At larger sizes the sharp corners, tight internal spaces, and angular joins become a defining visual feature, producing a chunky, high-impact word shape. In smaller settings those tight counters may close up, so the design tends to favor display use where its constructed details remain legible.