Sans Other Fuze 9 is a very bold, wide, medium contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: posters, headlines, logotypes, album art, event promos, futuristic, playful, techno, retro, stenciled, high impact, sci-fi styling, brand distinctiveness, graphic texture, geometric, cutout, modular, high-impact, display.
A heavy, geometric sans with broad proportions and simplified, near-monoline construction. Many glyphs are defined by circular and rectangular masses interrupted by consistent internal cutouts—often a horizontal, eye-shaped aperture—creating a stencil-like, segmented rhythm across the alphabet. Counters are frequently reduced or partially closed, terminals are blunt, and joins favor straight, engineered angles, with occasional diagonal slicing in letters like M, N, W, and Z. Overall spacing reads compact and dark, with distinctive negative-space motifs doing much of the character definition.
Best suited to large-scale display applications where its cutout details can read clearly, such as posters, headlines, branding marks, album artwork, and event or nightlife promotions. It can also work for short UI titles or game/tech themed graphics where a strong, distinctive texture is desired rather than maximum text readability.
The repeated cutout apertures and blocky geometry give the font a sci‑fi/techno tone with a retro-futurist flavor. It feels bold and attention-seeking, with a slightly quirky, game-like personality driven by the “masked” counters and dramatic silhouettes.
The design appears intended to deliver a distinctive display voice by combining bold geometric forms with a consistent system of internal cutouts, producing a recognizable texture and a futuristic, engineered impression. Its letterforms prioritize silhouette and motif consistency over conventional counter shapes, aiming for impact and memorability in short text settings.
Legibility is intentionally stylized: several letters rely on internal slits and partial bowls for recognition, which increases visual intrigue but can reduce clarity at small sizes. Numerals follow the same cutout language, maintaining a cohesive, graphic texture in mixed alphanumeric settings.