Sans Other Ohny 6 is a bold, normal width, monoline, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: posters, headlines, logos, gaming, album art, industrial, arcade, techno, punk, mechanical, display impact, geometric styling, industrial tone, arcade feel, angular, faceted, blocky, stencil-like, wedge-cut.
A heavy, geometric sans with sharply chamfered corners and faceted, wedge-cut terminals that create a subtly irregular silhouette. Strokes stay largely uniform, but many glyphs lean into trapezoidal bowls, sliced joints, and offset diagonals, producing a purposeful “cut metal” rhythm. Counters are compact and often squared or notched, and curves are minimized in favor of straight segments and abrupt angles. Overall spacing reads tight and sturdy, with a strong grid-based structure and occasional asymmetries that add bite.
Best suited to short, high-impact text where its angular details can be appreciated: posters, event titles, music or gaming graphics, branding marks, and packaging callouts. It can also work for UI labels or section headers when you want a hard, techno-industrial voice, but the tight counters and stylized shapes make it less ideal for long-form reading at small sizes.
The font conveys an industrial, game-like attitude—part arcade display, part DIY techno—mixing hard-edged geometry with a slightly unruly, handmade tension. Its sharp cuts and compressed counters give it an assertive, urban tone that feels mechanical and energetic rather than neutral or quiet.
The design appears intended as a distinctive display sans that departs from neutral geometry through systematic corner cuts, notches, and trapezoidal construction. The consistent faceting suggests a deliberate theme—like machined parts or arcade-era lettering—aimed at delivering impact and character in bold typographic settings.
Uppercase forms are especially architectural, while lowercase introduces more idiosyncratic shapes (notched shoulders, angular bowls, and simplified stems) that heighten the custom-display feel. Numerals follow the same faceted construction, with squared apertures and abrupt directional changes that keep the set visually consistent in headings and badges.