Sans Other Oblo 11 is a very bold, normal width, monoline, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: posters, logos, headlines, game ui, packaging, arcade, industrial, aggressive, retro, mechanical, display impact, arcade styling, stencil feel, mechanical voice, angular, faceted, stencil-like, blocky, geometric.
A heavy, block-constructed sans with faceted corners and frequent diagonal cuts that create a chiseled, modular silhouette. Strokes stay consistently thick, while counters and apertures are often reduced to small rectangular cutouts, giving letters a compact, armored feel. The lowercase echoes the uppercase structure closely, with simplified bowls and squared terminals; several glyphs show intentional irregularities and slanted joins that add a jittery, hand-cut rhythm. Numerals follow the same squared geometry with tight internal space and strong, poster-like presence.
Best suited to display roles such as posters, album art, logos, esports or arcade-themed graphics, and game/UI titling where its geometric punch reads quickly. It can also work for packaging or labels needing a tough, mechanical voice, but is less comfortable for long passages due to tight counters and strong texture.
The overall tone feels arcade-inspired and industrial, with an assertive, hard-edged energy. Its chopped corners and minimal counters evoke stenciling, sci‑fi interfaces, and rugged signage rather than smooth corporate neutrality. The slight inconsistencies across glyphs add a gritty, rebellious character.
The letterforms appear designed to maximize impact through bold, cut-corner geometry and compact counters, creating a distinctive, engineered look. The consistent stroke weight and modular construction suggest an intention to emulate stenciled or arcade-style lettering while retaining a cohesive alphabet across cases and numerals.
The design relies on silhouette and negative-space notches more than interior readability, which makes it most effective at larger sizes. The angular joins and small counters can visually fill in when reduced, especially in dense text settings.