Sans Other Pefi 6 is a regular weight, very wide, monoline, italic, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, logos, posters, gaming, tech ui, futuristic, techno, angular, racing, sci‑fi, sci‑fi styling, speed emphasis, industrial precision, display impact, octagonal, chamfered, geometric, mechanical, sleek.
A sharply geometric sans with pronounced rightward slant and crisp, chamfered corners throughout. Strokes maintain an even, monoline presence, but many joins break into small gaps or segmented joints, giving letters a constructed, modular feel. Counters tend toward squarish forms (notably in O/Q/0/9), and terminals are frequently clipped on diagonals, producing an octagonal silhouette. The rhythm is expansive and horizontally oriented, with wide caps and generous internal space, while lowercase forms echo the same hard-edged construction with compact, squared bowls and simplified curves.
Best suited for display settings where its angular construction can carry the visual voice—headlines, logos, posters, esports or gaming graphics, and tech or sci‑fi themed UI/packaging. It works especially well when set large, where the chamfers and segmented joins remain clear and intentional.
The overall tone is futuristic and performance-minded, evoking digital hardware, vehicle branding, and science‑fiction interfaces. Its angular cuts and forward slant create a sense of speed and engineered precision, while the segmented detailing adds a distinctly synthetic, techno character.
The design appears intended to deliver a sleek, forward-leaning techno sans that communicates speed and engineered modernity. By replacing smooth curves with chamfered geometry and introducing segmented joins, it aims for a distinctive sci‑fi flavor while staying legible enough for short phrases and branding.
Distinctive details include a sharply notched, constructed M/W, a boxed, geometric O/0, and a Q that reads as a squared form with an inset tail. Numerals follow the same chamfered logic, with a slashed zero and tightly engineered shapes that prioritize style over neutrality. The diagonal clipping and occasional open joints become more prominent at smaller sizes, where spacing and segmentation may need careful handling.