Sans Other Tiri 5 is a light, narrow, monoline, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, sci-fi titles, game ui, branding, futuristic, technical, retro, architectural, sci-fi feel, tech flavor, retro digital, modular system, display impact, squared, angular, stencil-like, geometric, modular.
A rectilinear, geometric sans built from consistently thin strokes and hard corners, with occasional 45° chamfers where curves would normally occur. Bowls and counters are largely squared-off, giving letters like O/Q/D a boxy footprint, while terminals tend to end flat and clean. Proportions are compact and vertically oriented, and the alphabet mixes straight-sided constructions with a few distinctive cut-ins and notches (notably in forms like G, Q, and some diagonals), creating a modular, system-like rhythm in text.
Best suited to short-to-medium setting where its angular construction can be appreciated: headlines, posters, sci‑fi and tech titling, game/UI elements, and brand marks that want a retro-futurist or engineered voice. It can work for compact labels and navigational text when sizes are generous enough to preserve the thin strokes and interior corners.
The overall tone reads as futuristic and technical with a clear retro-digital edge—evoking early computer graphics, sci‑fi titling, and arcade or synth-era interface lettering. Its crisp, engineered geometry feels deliberate and schematic rather than warm or humanist.
The design appears intended to translate a constructed, grid-minded aesthetic into a clean outline font—favoring squared counters, chamfered pseudo-curves, and minimalist strokes to suggest technology and modernist modularity while remaining legible in display use.
In running text the squared curves and occasional chamfered joins create a strong pixel-adjacent flavor without being strictly bitmap. Distinctive glyph decisions (such as the angular S/Z and the constructed diagonals in letters like K/X) add character and help the design stand out, though the sharp geometry can feel more display-oriented than neutral.