Sans Other Tiry 4 is a light, normal width, monoline, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: ui labels, game ui, posters, tech branding, packaging, techno, digital, modular, futuristic, precise, digital aesthetic, modular design, sci-fi tone, display clarity, rectilinear, angular, geometric, square terminals, open counters.
A rectilinear, geometric sans built from straight strokes and sharp corners, with consistent monoline weight and largely square terminals. Letterforms favor boxy construction and open, schematic counters, with several glyphs using clipped corners or partial outlines rather than fully rounded bowls. The rhythm is slightly mechanical and modular, with compact internal spacing and a clean, uniform stroke behavior that reads like a grid-driven design. Diacritics and punctuation appear minimal in the sample, and the overall texture stays crisp and linear at display sizes.
Best suited to short-to-medium display text where its geometric structure can read cleanly: UI labels, dashboards, game interfaces, hardware or software branding, event posters, and sci‑fi themed graphics. It can also work for headings and pull quotes when you want a crisp, engineered voice, while extended body copy may feel rigid due to the highly modular shapes.
The tone is distinctly techno and digital, evoking interface labeling, schematics, and retro-futuristic electronics. Its rigid geometry and squared-off curves create a cool, engineered feel—more utilitarian and coded than conversational. The look leans toward sci‑fi minimalism, with a subtle arcade/terminal flavor in the angular joins and rectangular bowls.
The design appears intended to translate a grid-based, digital aesthetic into a clean sans system—prioritizing sharp geometry, consistent stroke logic, and a distinctly technological texture. It aims for a functional display voice with enough atypical construction to feel custom and futuristic rather than purely neutral.
Several characters use unconventional construction (notably in diagonals and curved forms), which adds personality but can also introduce a slightly idiosyncratic reading experience in long passages. Numerals and capitals appear especially strong due to their boxlike silhouettes and consistent stroke logic, while some lowercase forms adopt simplified, almost signage-like structures.