Sans Other Orjy 1 is a very bold, very wide, monoline, upright, tall x-height font.
Keywords: game ui, sci‑fi titles, posters, brand marks, packaging, futuristic, arcade, tech, industrial, geometric, tech voice, display impact, grid system, retro future, angled corners, square counters, stencil-like, modular, compact spacing.
A heavy, modular sans built from straight strokes and squared counters, with corners frequently chamfered into short diagonals. The construction is largely orthogonal and monoline in feel, producing blocky silhouettes and rectangular interior spaces in letters like O, P, and R. Curves are minimized in favor of stepped geometry; diagonals appear as crisp cut-ins on forms such as K, V, W, and X. Lowercase follows the same rigid system with simplified, squared shapes and single-storey forms, and the numerals echo the same industrial, cut-corner logic for consistent color and rhythm.
Best suited to display settings where its blocky geometry and strong texture can lead—headlines, game and app UI accents, esports or tech branding, posters, and packaging. It can work for short bursts of text such as labels, navigation, or feature callouts when set with ample size and spacing.
The overall tone reads digital and mechanical, evoking arcade UI, sci‑fi interfaces, and utilitarian labelling. Its sharp chamfers and square counters give it a assertive, engineered presence that feels retro-futurist and game-adjacent rather than neutral or humanist.
The design intent appears to be a crisp, grid-driven display sans that prioritizes impact and a techno-industrial voice. The consistent square counters and chamfered joins suggest a system meant to feel constructed and digital, with enough quirky cut-ins to create a distinctive identity in headings and logos.
Spacing appears fairly tight in running text, emphasizing a dense, poster-like texture. Several glyphs use distinctive notches and cutaways (notably in B, S, and some numerals), which increases character but can reduce clarity at smaller sizes.