Sans Other Otko 1 is a regular weight, very wide, monoline, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: sci-fi titles, tech branding, ui headings, gaming, posters, futuristic, tech, digital, modular, industrial, tech aesthetic, sci-fi styling, modular construction, display clarity, geometric, rectilinear, squared, angled, open counters.
A rectilinear sans built from straight, monoline strokes with squared terminals and crisp right angles. Curves are largely replaced by boxy, chamfer-like joins, producing squared bowls (O, D) and angular diagonals (K, M, N, V, W, X, Y). Counters tend to be open and engineered, with a slightly stencil-like feeling in places where strokes stop short or segments separate (notably in S and some numerals). Proportions read extended and low-contrast, with a consistent stroke rhythm and a clean, mechanical baseline-to-cap structure.
Best suited to display applications where a high-tech, geometric voice is desired: sci-fi or gaming titles, tech and hardware branding, interface headings, and posters. It can also work for short captions or labels when you want a precise, engineered aesthetic and generous letter spacing.
The overall tone is futuristic and technical, evoking sci-fi interfaces, electronics labeling, and geometric display typography. Its sharp corners and modular construction feel precise and machine-made, lending a confident, engineered character rather than a humanist one.
The design appears intended to translate a modular, screen-influenced geometry into a readable sans, prioritizing crisp straight lines, squared bowls, and angular joins for a distinctly futuristic presence. The constructed details suggest an aim for a techno identity that remains coherent across both uppercase and lowercase.
The most distinctive identifiers are the boxy round forms, the segmented/constructed look in a few glyphs, and the broad horizontal stance that creates a strong, track-like flow in text. In paragraph samples it maintains a steady texture, but the squared construction keeps it firmly in display territory rather than neutral body text.