Sans Other Tiri 6 is a light, narrow, monoline, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: ui display, tech branding, signage, posters, game titles, tech, futuristic, modular, minimal, schematic, tech aesthetic, system labeling, sci-fi display, geometric clarity, angular, geometric, rectilinear, boxy, open counters.
A rectilinear sans with a modular, near-monoline construction built from straight strokes and hard corners. Curves are largely replaced by squared forms and clipped angles, producing boxy bowls and open, mechanical-looking counters. Terminals are flat and abrupt, with occasional angled joins (notably in diagonals), and the overall rhythm feels grid-aligned and engineered. The lowercase follows the same architectural logic, with simplified shapes and sparse internal detailing that keeps color even and airy in text.
Best suited for display sizes where its angular detailing and open square counters remain clear—such as interface headings, product and tech branding, wayfinding/labels, posters, and entertainment titles with a sci‑fi or industrial theme. It can work for short text blocks when generous spacing and size preserve the crisp geometry.
The font reads as futuristic and utilitarian, evoking digital interfaces, technical labeling, and schematic graphics. Its squared geometry and disciplined stroke logic give it a cool, precise tone with a distinctly synthetic, sci‑fi flavor.
The design intention appears to be a clean, constructed sans that prioritizes a grid-based, machine-made aesthetic. By minimizing curves and standardizing stroke behavior, it aims for a distinctive techno voice while staying legible through consistent proportions and simplified internal shapes.
Several glyphs lean on distinctive open forms (e.g., squared C/G-style openings and streamlined lowercase shapes), emphasizing recognizability through structure rather than traditional calligraphic cues. Numerals and capitals share the same modular vocabulary, helping mixed-case settings maintain a consistent, system-like texture.