Sans Other Olga 11 is a bold, wide, low contrast, upright, normal x-height font visually similar to 'Quayzaar' by Test Pilot Collective (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: game ui, headlines, posters, logos, tech branding, pixel, arcade, tech, futuristic, industrial, retro computing, digital display, sci-fi labeling, ui styling, high impact, angular, blocky, square, modular, geometric.
A modular, pixel-built sans with squared bowls, clipped corners, and a strongly rectilinear skeleton. Strokes are heavy and uniform, with hard 90° turns and stepped diagonals that read like low-resolution construction rather than smooth curves. Counters tend to be squarish and sometimes partially open, giving several letters a stencil-like, segmented feel. The proportions are generally broad with compact interior space, and spacing feels fairly even and grid-driven, prioritizing silhouette clarity over traditional calligraphic nuance.
Best suited to display settings where its pixel geometry can read crisply: game interfaces, retro computing themes, sci‑fi or tech event graphics, packaging accents, and punchy headlines. It can also work for short labels and navigation in stylized UI, but the stepped detailing is most effective when given enough size and contrast.
The font projects a retro-digital, arcade-era attitude with a utilitarian, machine-made rhythm. Its sharp geometry and pixel stepping evoke terminals, game UI, and sci‑fi labeling, feeling energetic and technical rather than formal or literary.
The design appears intended to translate an 8-bit, grid-based construction into a contemporary display face, emphasizing mechanical consistency, high-impact silhouettes, and a distinctly digital flavor.
Distinctive forms come from the deliberate stair-stepping on diagonals and the use of squared cut-ins that create small notches and apertures, especially noticeable in letters with joins and bowls. Numerals follow the same modular logic, keeping a consistent, display-oriented texture at larger sizes.