Sans Other Tunav 8 is a very light, normal width, monoline, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: display, logos, branding, posters, packaging, futuristic, playful, techy, space-age, geometric, distinct identity, geometric experiment, sci-fi branding, headline impact, rounded, modular, minimal, clean, airy.
A rounded, geometric sans with monoline construction and a highly modular feel. Forms rely on circular bowls, soft corners, and frequent open apertures, with several letters built from partial arcs rather than fully closed shapes. Horizontal strokes are often short and centered, giving counters an open, schematic look, while terminals tend to end bluntly or with gentle rounding. Distinctive details include dotted or target-like counters in several glyphs and digit forms that echo the same circular, segmented logic for a consistent rhythm across letters and numbers.
This design suits short, high-impact settings such as logos, wordmarks, titles, posters, packaging, and UI accents where the geometric construction and dotted counters can be appreciated. It works especially well in larger sizes for tech, sci‑fi, or concept-forward branding, and is less ideal for dense body copy where the open counters and segmented strokes may hinder quick reading.
The overall tone is futuristic and slightly playful, evoking instrument panels, sci‑fi interfaces, and retro space-age graphic design. Its open construction and repeated circular motifs make it feel light, friendly, and experimental rather than strictly utilitarian.
The font appears intended as a distinctive geometric sans that explores modular, partially open constructions and circular motifs to create a recognizable, futuristic voice. The repeated target-like counter detail suggests a deliberate identity element meant to stand out in headlines and branding contexts.
Letterforms prioritize visual motifs and pattern consistency over conventional closed counters, which increases character but can reduce clarity at smaller sizes. The sample text shows a steady baseline and even stroke presence, with the decorative counter dots becoming a prominent texture in continuous reading.