Sans Other Tiry 8 is a light, normal width, monoline, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: ui labels, headlines, posters, tech branding, game ui, techno, modular, futuristic, precise, schematic, futurism, modularity, technical tone, display impact, angular, geometric, rectilinear, squared, wireframe.
This typeface is built from clean, monoline strokes with a strongly rectilinear, squared-off construction. Curves are largely replaced by chamfered corners and diagonal joins, producing boxy counters and straight-sided bowls. Terminals are blunt and uniform, with consistent stroke weight and a slightly condensed, modular rhythm that reads like a drawn-on grid. The overall texture is crisp and airy, with open apertures and simplified forms that favor straight segments over continuous curves.
It works best where a crisp, technical look is desired: interface labels, dashboards, sci‑fi or gaming graphics, and bold titling for posters or packaging. The simplified, angular construction makes it particularly effective at larger sizes and in short headings where its geometric personality can lead the visual tone.
The face conveys a technical, futuristic tone—more schematic than humanist—suggesting interfaces, devices, and engineered systems. Its angular geometry and wireframe-like outlines feel deliberate and controlled, giving it a cool, utilitarian personality that still reads as distinctive and stylized.
The design appears aimed at delivering a futuristic, grid-built sans with a distinctive rectilinear voice. By prioritizing straight segments, chamfered corners, and uniform stroke behavior, it seeks a clean techno aesthetic that stands out in display and UI-oriented contexts.
Several glyphs lean into geometric substitutions (square bowls, diagonal ‘cuts’ and kinked joins), which adds character but also makes the design feel intentionally constructed rather than traditional. The squared counters and consistent terminals create a cohesive, modular presence, especially in all-caps and short strings.