Sans Other Lokog 3 is a bold, normal width, low contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, packaging, game ui, book covers, rustic, playful, hand-cut, medieval, handmade effect, themed display, rustic texture, headline impact, angular, faceted, blocky, irregular, high-ink.
This typeface uses chunky, angular letterforms built from broad strokes with visibly faceted corners, as if cut from paper or chiseled from wood. Curves are simplified into polygonal arcs, and terminals often end in blunt, slightly skewed cuts that introduce a lively unevenness. Counters are compact and somewhat irregular, with rounded characters like O, C, and G rendered as multi-sided shapes rather than smooth circles. Spacing and widths vary noticeably across glyphs, creating a hand-made rhythm while maintaining solid, high-coverage silhouettes that read best at larger sizes.
Best suited for headlines and short display settings where the chiseled texture can be appreciated—posters, packaging, labels, and themed branding. It also fits game UI, tavern/fantasy signage, and book covers or chapter titles that benefit from a crafted, old-world voice. For long passages, its dense shapes and irregular rhythm are likely to feel heavy, so larger sizes and generous spacing work better.
The overall tone is rustic and mischievous, with a storybook, old-world energy that feels both handmade and theatrical. Its jagged, faceted texture suggests craft, folklore, and playful menace rather than sleek modernity. The font’s irregular cuts and heavy presence give it a spirited, attention-grabbing voice.
The design appears intended to deliver a handmade, cut-and-carved look in a simple, sans-derived structure, prioritizing character and impact over neutral polish. By replacing smooth curves with faceted geometry and keeping strokes broad and compact, it aims to evoke rustic craft and theatrical display styling.
Uppercase forms feel sturdy and emblematic, while lowercase introduces extra quirks (notably in the b, k, and y) that emphasize the hand-cut character. Numerals follow the same faceted logic, with compact interior shapes and blunt joints that keep the set visually consistent.