Sans Other Jigi 6 is a regular weight, normal width, monoline, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, branding, logos, gaming ui, techno, futuristic, digital, industrial, modular, tech aesthetic, modular system, interface tone, display impact, angular, geometric, squared, chamfered, corner-cut.
A geometric, square-leaning sans with monoline strokes and a strongly modular construction. Letters are built from straight segments with frequent chamfered corners and occasional diagonal joins, creating a crisp, engineered silhouette. Counters tend toward rectangular forms, terminals are flat and abrupt, and curves are largely avoided in favor of faceted shapes. Proportions feel compact and efficient, with tight apertures in several glyphs and a consistent, grid-like rhythm across uppercase, lowercase, and numerals.
Best suited to display applications where the geometric construction can be appreciated: headlines, posters, logotypes, product branding, packaging accents, and game or app interface titling. It can also work for short labels or signage-style text, but the tight apertures and angular joins suggest using it at moderate to large sizes for maximum clarity.
The overall tone is overtly digital and utilitarian, evoking sci‑fi interfaces, arcade-era display typography, and industrial labeling. Its sharp geometry and clipped corners convey precision and a slightly retro-tech attitude rather than warmth or softness.
The design appears intended to deliver a cohesive, grid-based techno aesthetic—prioritizing crisp straight edges, corner cuts, and modular repeatability to create a distinctive digital voice for contemporary or retro-futurist visual systems.
The uppercase set reads particularly stencil-like and architectural due to the squared bowls and cut-in corners, while lowercase maintains the same modular logic for a cohesive system. Numerals follow the same angular language, with clear differentiation and a strong display presence at larger sizes.