Sans Other Ordy 14 is a very bold, very wide, monoline, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, logos, posters, packaging, sports branding, futuristic, techno, industrial, geometric, retro sci-fi, impact, branding, sci-fi, display, identity, rounded corners, soft terminals, extended, modular, compact apertures.
A heavy, extended sans with rounded corners and monoline strokes that read as machined and modular. Forms are built from broad horizontal and vertical elements with frequent squared counters softened by radiused inner corners, creating a stencil-like rhythm without true breaks. Apertures tend to be tight and rectangular, and many letters emphasize flat bars and clipped curves rather than fully open bowls. Numerals and lowercase echo the same blocky construction, producing a consistent, logo-forward texture across lines of text.
Best suited to display applications such as headlines, posters, logos, and packaging where the bold, engineered shapes can be appreciated. It also fits UI/tech branding, game titles, and event graphics that benefit from a futuristic or industrial voice. For longer passages, larger sizes and generous spacing will help maintain clarity as counters and apertures are deliberately compact.
The overall tone feels futuristic and engineered, with a strong techno/industrial flavor. Its chunky geometry and softened corners suggest retro sci‑fi interfaces, arcade-era display typography, and branded hardware aesthetics rather than neutral editorial text.
The font appears designed to deliver maximum visual impact through a wide, geometric construction and signature internal cutouts. Its consistent monoline weight and rounded-rectilinear forms prioritize a modern, tech-forward identity that remains cohesive across uppercase, lowercase, and numerals.
The design relies on distinctive interior cutouts (notably in characters like E, F, P, and several numerals), which creates a recognizable pattern at large sizes but can visually densify at small sizes. The wide stance and compact openings produce strong silhouette recognition, favoring short words and titling where shape and impact matter most.