Sans Other Ryguj 9 is a regular weight, normal width, high contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, logos, branding, game ui, tech, industrial, futuristic, mechanical, angular, distinctive display, tech aesthetic, constructed geometry, industrial voice, beveled, faceted, octagonal, corner-cut, monolinear.
A geometric, angular sans built from straight strokes and squared counters, with frequent corner cuts that create a beveled, faceted silhouette. Curves are largely avoided in favor of octagonal and rectangular construction, and many joins terminate in sharp diagonal chamfers that add a crisp, engineered rhythm. Strokes read as mostly monolinear with deliberate interior openings and tight apertures, producing compact letterforms with a strong grid-like logic. The overall texture is dark and orderly, with distinct, stylized forms for both capitals and lowercase and numerals that echo the same cut-corner geometry.
Best suited for display applications where its faceted construction can be appreciated—headlines, posters, logos, and brand marks with a technical or industrial brief. It can also work well for on-screen UI elements in games or futuristic interface design, especially at medium to large sizes where the corner cuts remain clear.
The face conveys a technical, industrial tone—precise, schematic, and slightly sci‑fi. Its angular cuts and squared shapes suggest machinery, interfaces, and fabricated signage rather than warmth or handwriting. The overall impression is assertive and modern, with a deliberate, constructed personality.
The design intention appears to be a constructed, grid-driven sans that prioritizes a distinctive, angular voice over neutrality. By replacing curves with chamfered geometry and maintaining consistent cut-corner detailing, it aims to deliver a cohesive techno aesthetic that stands out in titles and identity work.
Diagonal corner notches appear consistently across stems, terminals, and bowls, creating a repeated visual motif that doubles as a distinguishing feature at display sizes. Round letters (such as O/Q and 0) resolve into multi-sided forms, and several glyphs adopt distinctive, stylized joins that emphasize the font’s engineered character.