Sans Other Jamih 5 is a regular weight, wide, monoline, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, logos, posters, ui labels, gaming, futuristic, tech, modular, retro sci‑fi, industrial, sci‑fi branding, display impact, systemic geometry, tech aesthetic, square-rounded, geometric, stencil-like, angular, high contrast gaps.
This typeface is built from geometric, square-leaning forms with rounded corners and a consistent stroke thickness. Many letters are constructed from open arcs and straight segments, leaving deliberate breaks and notches that create a modular, almost stencil-like rhythm. Counters tend to be rectangular or rounded-rect, and terminals often end in flat cuts or squared hooks, giving the alphabet a segmented, engineered feel. The overall spacing and proportions read open and extended, with distinctive, simplified curves in characters like S, G, and 2 that emphasize the font’s constructed geometry.
This font is well suited to headlines, logos, titles, and short bursts of text where its modular construction can be appreciated. It fits especially well in tech branding, gaming/entertainment graphics, science-fiction themes, and interface-style labeling where a “designed system” look is desired. For longer passages, it will generally perform best at larger sizes due to the intentional breaks and highly stylized letterforms.
The design conveys a futuristic, interface-driven tone with a retro-tech edge, reminiscent of digital displays and sci-fi branding. Its intentional gaps and squared curves suggest machinery, circuitry, and fabricated components rather than handwriting or traditional print forms. The result feels assertive and synthetic—more “system” than “human,” while still remaining clean and readable at display sizes.
The letterforms appear designed to deliver a distinctive, futuristic sans voice through modular geometry and controlled gaps, prioritizing character and visual identity over neutrality. Its construction suggests an intent to emulate engineered components or display-inspired forms while keeping strokes consistent and forms systematically repeatable across the character set.
Distinctive details include the frequent use of cut-in corners and internal notches (notably in B, R, and several lowercase forms), plus a sharply stylized S and segmented numerals that reinforce the technical character. The lowercase has a similarly constructed logic to the uppercase, with single-storey a and g and simplified bowls that maintain the same square-rounded grammar. The overall texture is even and consistent, but the deliberate openings can become a defining feature that dominates at smaller sizes.