Sans Other Ibtu 6 is a bold, normal width, monoline, upright, short x-height font.
Keywords: posters, headlines, logos, packaging, comics, playful, quirky, hand-cut, comic, edgy, display impact, handmade feel, comic energy, edgy branding, attention grab, angular, irregular, geometric, blocky, tilted.
A sharply angular, block-built sans with chunky strokes and irregular, hand-cut geometry. Stems and bowls are formed from straight segments with frequent diagonal cuts, producing trapezoids and skewed counters rather than smooth curves. Letterforms vary noticeably in width and internal spacing, giving the line a bouncy rhythm; many glyphs appear slightly rotated or asymmetrically balanced. The overall texture is dense and dark, with crisp edges and a deliberately imperfect, cut-paper consistency across capitals, lowercase, and numerals.
Best suited for display use where its jagged geometry and uneven rhythm can be a feature: posters, event titles, game or comic graphics, packaging, stickers, and short branding phrases. It can also work for playful signage or attention-grabbing social media headlines, but is less comfortable for extended reading due to its tight counters and intentionally irregular spacing.
The font reads as mischievous and energetic, like lettering assembled from jagged pieces. Its uneven stance and spiky silhouettes create a cartoon-horror or punk zine tone—humorous, loud, and intentionally unruly rather than polished or corporate.
The design appears intended to mimic rough, hand-cut or improvised lettering while staying within a bold, straight-edged sans framework. By emphasizing angular construction, width variation, and slight tilt, it aims to deliver strong visual personality and impact in short, high-contrast settings.
Counters tend to be small and angular, and several characters rely on distinctive cut-ins and notches for differentiation (notably in shapes like B, R, S, and 8). The sample text shows pronounced baseline wobble and varying sidebearings, which amplifies the handmade feel but can make long passages visually busy at smaller sizes.