Serif Other Ufli 9 is a regular weight, wide, monoline, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: logotypes, titles, posters, game ui, album covers, arcane, gothic, fantasy, medieval, ritual, worldbuilding, display impact, mystique, ornamental texture, angular, chiseled, spiky, ornamental, high-contrast corners.
This typeface is built from straight, monoline strokes with a squared, architectural skeleton and sharply cut terminals. Serifs are expressed as pointed, wedge-like flares and small horned notches, giving many corners a crisp, chiseled finish. Curves are minimized in favor of faceted joins and rectangular counters, producing a technical, rune-like rhythm. Uppercase forms feel compact and sturdy, while the lowercase introduces distinctive, stylized constructions (notably in rounded letters) that maintain the same angular logic and consistent stroke weight.
Best suited for display typography where the angular serifs and carved details can be appreciated—such as logos, title cards, posters, packaging accents, and entertainment branding (especially fantasy, gothic, or techno-mystic themes). It can work for short passages in larger sizes, but its sharp cornering and ornamental terminals favor headings over continuous small-size text.
The overall tone reads occult and ceremonial, mixing blackletter-adjacent sharpness with a sci‑fi/techno geometry. It evokes spellbook headings, game UI for dark fantasy worlds, and title treatments meant to feel mystical, guarded, or coded.
The design intention appears to be creating a decorative serif with a runic, engraved personality—using monoline construction and faceted geometry to suggest carved metal or stone while preserving clear letter separation for modern display use.
The design relies heavily on crisp corner details and small spikes at terminals, which become a key texture at larger sizes but may visually crowd at very small sizes. Numerals and punctuation follow the same faceted language, helping the set feel cohesive in display settings.