Sans Other Jamih 8 is a regular weight, wide, monoline, upright, normal x-height, monospaced font.
Keywords: ui labels, tech branding, game ui, signage, posters, futuristic, technical, industrial, retro sci-fi, utilitarian, systematic, sci-fi ui, industrial labeling, modular design, rounded corners, square forms, stencil-like, modular, mechanical.
This font is built from squared, modular letterforms with softly rounded corners and consistent stroke thickness. Curves are minimized and translated into chamfered arcs and right-angle turns, producing a geometric, rectilinear rhythm. Many glyphs show deliberate breaks and inset counters that read as cut-outs, giving several forms a subtle stencil-like construction. Overall spacing and proportions feel engineered and uniform, with wide set widths and open internal shapes that keep the texture clean at display sizes.
Well-suited for interface-style typography, HUD and game UI elements, instrument or product labeling, and tech-forward branding where a geometric, engineered voice is desired. It also works for headlines, posters, and short blocks of text where the modular shapes can be appreciated without overwhelming long-form reading.
The tone is distinctly technical and machine-made, evoking control panels, sci-fi interfaces, and industrial labeling. Its crisp geometry and systematic construction create a cool, functional mood rather than a humanist or calligraphic one. The slightly playful rounded corners soften the severity, lending a retro-futurist feel.
The design appears intended to deliver a highly systematic, techno-geometric sans with a modular construction language and recognizable, display-oriented forms. The consistent stroke and squared geometry prioritize clarity, repeatable shapes, and a strong stylistic signature that reads as functional and futuristic.
Distinctive details include squared bowls and counters (notably in B, D, O, and 0-like forms), angular diagonals in V/W/X, and simplified terminals that emphasize a constructed, component-based look. Numerals follow the same rectilinear logic, with a slashed zero and stepped curves that maintain strong visual consistency across the set.