Sans Other Emhy 10 is a very bold, wide, medium contrast, italic, tall x-height font visually similar to 'FTY Ultra Chiseled' by Fontry West (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: sports branding, esports, posters, headlines, game ui, aggressive, futuristic, sporty, industrial, comic-book, impact, speed, techno, display, branding, angular, slanted, blocky, condensed counters, notched.
A heavy, slanted sans with sharply angular, wedge-like forms and a distinctly mechanical construction. Strokes are mostly monoline with abrupt cutoffs, producing triangular notches and internal incisions that read like speed slits across bowls and counters. The letterforms are compact and tightly enclosed, with squared shoulders, sharp terminals, and a forward-leaning stance that keeps the texture dense even in longer text. Lowercase follows the same blocky geometry, with simplified curves and small apertures that emphasize a rugged, engineered look.
Well-suited to short, bold statements such as sports and esports identities, event posters, album or game titles, product decals, and punchy packaging callouts. It can also work for interface labels in action or sci-fi themed designs where the angular detailing reinforces a technical, high-speed aesthetic.
The overall tone is fast, forceful, and high-impact, evoking racing graphics, arcade or sci-fi interfaces, and action-oriented branding. Its sharp cuts and slanted rhythm give it an assertive, competitive feel, closer to display typography for motion and energy than to neutral everyday text.
Likely designed as a statement display sans that prioritizes motion and impact through slant, compact counters, and repeated notched detailing. The consistent wedge geometry suggests an intention to mimic speed marks or machined cuts, giving words a cohesive, branded texture.
The distinctive internal cuts are consistent across many glyphs and create strong horizontal accents that can visually stitch letters together in words. Because counters are relatively tight, the style reads best when given room to breathe—especially in smaller sizes or dense copy where the incisions may visually merge.