Sans Other Orhi 11 is a very bold, very wide, low contrast, upright, tall x-height font.
Keywords: game ui, posters, headlines, logos, packaging, arcade, tech, industrial, retro, brutalist, bitmap homage, digital display, impactful signage, modular system, pixelated, blocky, modular, geometric, orthogonal.
A chunky, modular sans built from square, orthogonal strokes with crisp 90° turns and hard terminals. Forms are constructed on a pixel-like grid, with stepped diagonals and squared counters that read as cut-outs. The rhythm is compact and dense, with wide bodies, short apertures, and a tall x-height that keeps lowercase prominent. Spacing feels engineered rather than calligraphic, producing a sturdy, high-impact texture in lines of text.
Best suited to display typography where a bold, digital voice is desired—game titles, UI headings, tech/event posters, merchandise graphics, and branding that leans retro-computing. It can work for short bursts of copy, but the dense, blocky texture is most effective in headlines and labels rather than long-form text.
The overall tone is distinctly digital and game-adjacent, evoking arcade UI, bitmap screens, and utilitarian sci‑fi labeling. Its heavy, squared construction gives it an assertive, mechanical presence that feels rugged and playful at the same time.
The design appears intended to translate bitmap aesthetics into a strong, contemporary display sans: maximizing impact through square modules, simplified geometry, and consistent right-angled construction. It prioritizes a distinctive screen-like identity and robust legibility in compact, high-contrast settings.
Distinctive stencil-like gaps and interior notches appear in several glyphs, reinforcing the modular, fabricated look. Curves are largely implied through stepping, so the design favors sharp geometry over smoothness and will read most clearly at display sizes where the pixel structure is intentional.