Sans Other Ofri 9 is a very bold, narrow, low contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: posters, headlines, logotypes, packaging, game ui, industrial, retro, arcade, techno, authoritative, high impact, tech branding, retro display, industrial labeling, distinctive texture, geometric, angular, squared, condensed, blocky.
A heavy, geometric sans with squared bowls and strongly rectilinear construction. Strokes are predominantly uniform and end in blunt, flat terminals, with frequent hard corners and small chamfer-like cuts that keep shapes from feeling purely box-drawn. Counters tend to be rectangular and compact, and curves are minimized into faceted segments, producing a crisp, machined silhouette. The lowercase stays simple and sturdy, with single-storey forms and a squared dot on the i, while figures are blocky and high-impact for signage-like clarity.
Best suited to display settings where impact and a rigid, technical character are desired—posters, headlines, branding marks, packaging, and game/arcade interfaces. It can also work for short labels or section headers where its dense, angular forms remain legible at moderate sizes.
The overall tone is bold and utilitarian with a distinctly retro-futurist flavor. Its angular, cut-metal shapes evoke arcade marquees, industrial labeling, and techno-era display typography—confident, slightly aggressive, and attention-grabbing.
The design appears intended to deliver a compact, high-contrast-in-silhouette look through blocky geometry and faceted corners, optimizing for strong presence in titles and branding. It prioritizes a distinctive industrial/retro-tech voice over neutrality, aiming for immediate recognition in display typography.
Spacing and rhythm feel tight and purposeful, with consistent vertical stress and strong dark texture across lines. Several glyphs use internal rectangular cutouts and notched corners to create identity while maintaining a cohesive, stencil-adjacent vibe without fully breaking strokes.