Sans Other Wutu 15 is a very bold, narrow, medium contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, logotypes, packaging, signage, industrial, techno, retro, compact, assertive, impact, space-saving, futurism, utility, branding, rounded corners, rectilinear, modular, geometric, stencil-like.
A compact, heavy sans with a rectilinear, modular construction and consistently rounded outer corners. Strokes are thick and mostly monolinear, with tight counters and small, often rectangular apertures that give many glyphs a cut-out feel. Curves are minimized in favor of straight stems and squared bowls; where curvature appears (notably in S, C, and numerals), it remains blocky and controlled. Spacing reads tight and efficient, producing a dense, uniform texture in lines of text.
Best suited to short, high-impact settings such as headlines, posters, branding marks, packaging callouts, and signage where its dense shapes can read as purposeful and graphic. It can work for UI labels or game/tech themed graphics at larger sizes, while extended body text may feel heavy and closed-in due to the tight counters and compact spacing.
The overall tone is bold and machine-forward, evoking industrial labeling, arcade-era display lettering, and utilitarian tech interfaces. Its chunky proportions and clipped openings add a slightly futuristic, fabricated character—confident, compact, and attention-grabbing rather than delicate or conversational.
The design appears intended to deliver maximum visual weight and presence within a compact footprint, using modular geometry and rounded-corner terminals to suggest a manufactured, contemporary aesthetic. The consistent construction prioritizes bold recognizability and a strong silhouette over open readability and typographic nuance at small sizes.
Distinctive details include the squared, inset counters (e.g., in A, B, 8, 9) and the simplified, almost stencil-like joins in letters such as M, N, and W. The lowercase set echoes the caps’ geometry, with single-storey forms and minimal modulation, helping maintain a consistent, engineered rhythm across mixed-case settings.