Sans Other Bagah 4 is a regular weight, normal width, monoline, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, branding, packaging, user interfaces, tech, futuristic, industrial, modular, game ui, sci-fi identity, ui labeling, modular design, industrial tone, rounded corners, square forms, stencil-like, geometric, compact.
A geometric, squared sans with softly rounded outer corners and uniform stroke thickness. Many glyphs are built from rectilinear segments with occasional chamfered joins and minimal curvature, producing a modular, almost circuit-trace rhythm. Counters tend to be rectangular and slightly inset, terminals are blunt, and several diagonals (notably in K, V, W, X, Y) are rendered with angular, engineered joins rather than smooth transitions. The overall spacing and proportions feel compact and controlled, with a consistent grid-like construction across uppercase, lowercase, and numerals.
Best suited to display typography where its geometric construction and squared counters can be appreciated—headlines, posters, product branding, packaging, and tech-oriented identities. It also fits interface mockups, game UI, and on-screen labels where a clean, engineered aesthetic is desired, especially at medium to large sizes.
The tone is distinctly technical and futuristic, evoking digital interfaces, sci‑fi labeling, and industrial signage. Its squared geometry and rounded corners create a friendly-but-mechanized feel—precise and synthetic rather than humanist—suited to modern, gadget-forward branding and display applications.
The design appears intended to translate a grid-based, techno-industrial sensibility into a readable sans, balancing strict rectangular structure with rounded corners to keep the texture approachable. It prioritizes distinctive, system-like letterforms and consistent modular detailing for strong visual identity in short text.
Lowercase forms lean toward simplified, single-story constructions with squared bowls and short, squared shoulders, reinforcing the font’s modular logic. Numerals are similarly boxy and legible, with a distinctive, geometric “0” and angular “2”/“3” shapes that read well at display sizes. The design favors clear silhouettes over traditional typographic contrast, giving text a consistent, UI-like texture.