Sans Other Elto 2 is a very bold, very wide, low contrast, italic, tall x-height font visually similar to 'Logik' by Monotype (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: headlines, sports branding, esports, posters, logos, futuristic, sporty, aggressive, techy, racing, convey speed, add edge, stand out, modernize, oblique, extended, angular, stencil-cut, streamlined.
A heavy, extended oblique sans with sharp, chamfered corners and a compact, aerodynamic silhouette. Many strokes are interrupted by consistent diagonal cut-ins that read like stencil breaks or speed slashes, creating a segmented rhythm across the alphabet. Counters are tight and often squared-off, with rounded-rectangle behavior in characters like O/0, while diagonals and terminals stay crisp and mechanical. The overall texture is dense and forward-leaning, with a strong horizontal thrust and distinctly engineered geometry.
Best suited to display settings such as sports and esports identities, racing-themed graphics, tech or sci‑fi promotions, posters, packaging accents, and logo wordmarks where speed and power are desired. It can work for short subheads or labels when ample spacing and size are available, but the slashed details and dense color are most effective in bold, high-impact applications.
The font conveys motion and impact, leaning into a motorsport/arcade-tech attitude. Its cut-through details add a tactical, sci‑fi edge that feels energetic and slightly confrontational, making words look fast and “armored.”
The design appears intended to merge a clean sans foundation with aggressive, motion-driven styling via consistent diagonal cutouts and oblique momentum. It prioritizes a fast, modern presence and a distinctive signature texture that stands out in branding and headline typography.
The diagonal breaks are a defining motif and become most noticeable at larger sizes, where the internal segmentation reads as intentional styling rather than incidental gaps. In longer text, the extended width and strong slant create a dramatic, headline-first color that favors short lines and emphatic phrasing.