Sans Other Efnom 5 is a very bold, normal width, medium contrast, italic, normal x-height font.
Keywords: sports branding, racing titles, poster headlines, game ui, tech packaging, racing, aggressive, futuristic, tactical, industrial, convey speed, max impact, tech styling, display focus, branding, angular, oblique, squared, compact, slabbed.
A sharply angled, oblique sans with heavy, wedge-like strokes and squared counters. Forms are built from straight segments and clipped corners, producing a consistently geometric, stencil-adjacent rhythm without true breaks. Apertures are tight and bowls are boxy, with frequent use of diagonal terminals and stepped joins that emphasize forward motion. Numerals and capitals share the same rigid construction, giving the overall set a cohesive, engineered texture at display sizes.
This design is well suited to short, high-impact settings such as sports identities, racing-themed graphics, esports or game titles, and bold UI labels where quick recognition matters. It can also work for packaging and promotional headlines that benefit from an industrial, performance-oriented voice, while extended text will typically require generous spacing and size.
The font projects speed and impact, with a sporty, high-adrenaline tone reminiscent of motorsport graphics and sci‑fi interface labeling. Its aggressive angles and dense black shapes feel assertive and kinetic, favoring punch over softness or neutrality.
The letterforms appear intended to deliver a fast, mechanical aesthetic through angular geometry and forward-leaning posture, prioritizing a strong silhouette and immediate visual energy. The consistent use of clipped terminals and squared internal shapes suggests a focus on display-driven clarity and a cohesive, techno-sport personality.
The slant is integral to the construction rather than a simple skew, and many characters rely on distinctive cut-ins and notches to differentiate shapes. Counters and internal spaces stay relatively small, so the design reads best when given enough size or tracking to avoid dark clumping in longer strings.