Sans Other Otma 2 is a bold, very wide, low contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, logos, posters, game ui, tech branding, futuristic, techno, industrial, sci-fi, arcade, futurism, tech display, stylized branding, graphic impact, angular, geometric, extended, modular, squared.
A geometric, extended sans built from straight strokes and crisp 45° diagonals, with corners that feel chamfered rather than rounded. Counters are largely rectangular and open, producing a modular, engineered rhythm across words. Several glyphs use cut-ins and stencil-like breaks, and some horizontals are segmented into parallel bars (notably in forms resembling E/S/3), adding a distinctive internal striping. Overall spacing and widths feel intentionally varied, giving lines a dynamic, mechanical texture while maintaining a consistent baseline and cap-height.
Best suited to display applications where its angular construction and internal striping can be appreciated—headlines, posters, game/UI titling, and technology or sci‑fi themed branding. It works particularly well for short bursts of text, labels, and wordmarks where the geometric rhythm and extended proportions create impact.
The letterforms project a futuristic, technical mood—more cockpit display and arcade title than editorial text. Its sharp geometry and segmented strokes read as assertive and utilitarian, with a synthetic, machine-made character that suits science-fiction and digital culture cues.
The design appears intended to deliver a stylized, futuristic sans that feels engineered and modular, using chamfered corners and segmented strokes to signal technology and motion. Its construction prioritizes graphic presence and distinctive texture over neutral readability, aiming for strong identity in display settings.
The design leans heavily on rectilinear construction: rounded shapes are squared off, and diagonals are used to articulate joins and terminals. The distinctive multi-bar horizontals create strong patterning at text sizes, which becomes a key part of the font’s visual signature in headlines and short phrases.