Sans Other Pevi 10 is a very bold, very wide, monoline, italic, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, logos, sports branding, gaming ui, futuristic, motorsport, techno, aggressive, dynamic, speed emphasis, sci-fi styling, impact display, tech branding, angular, slanted, geometric, chiseled, corner-cut.
This typeface uses sharply angled, corner-cut forms with a pronounced forward slant and a compact, engineered rhythm. Strokes are consistently heavy and appear largely uniform, with counters and apertures shaped as faceted cutouts rather than smooth curves. Many joins and terminals resolve into beveled corners, giving letters a chiseled, machined look; rounded shapes (like O and Q) are constructed from straight segments with clipped corners. Spacing feels tight and purposeful, and the numeral set echoes the same segmented, aerodynamic construction.
Best suited to short, high-impact settings such as headlines, posters, title treatments, esports or motorsport branding, and tech or gaming interface accents. It can work for concise callouts and packaging-style labeling where the angular aesthetic is a benefit; for long text, its heavy, faceted construction is likely to feel intense and visually dense.
The overall tone is fast, technical, and assertive, evoking racing graphics and sci‑fi interfaces. Its sharp geometry and slanted stance communicate motion and intensity more than neutrality, with a distinctly synthetic, display-first character.
The design appears intended to deliver a high-speed, futuristic sans voice through slanted geometry and consistently beveled terminals. By replacing curves with segmented, cornered construction, it prioritizes a mechanical, aerodynamic impression that stands out at display sizes.
Distinctive features include polygonal bowls and counters, diagonals that read like speed lines, and a consistent use of angular notches in places where many sans fonts would use curves. The face maintains a cohesive visual system across caps, lowercase, and figures, though the strong styling makes it more impactful than subtle.