Sans Other Orly 14 is a very bold, wide, monoline, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: game ui, posters, headlines, logos, titles, arcade, pixelated, techno, industrial, retro, arcade homage, digital display, impactful branding, grid construction, blocky, square, angular, modular, stencil-like.
A compact, modular display sans built from square, pixel-like units with hard right angles and uniform stroke thickness. Forms are predominantly geometric and rectilinear, with corners cut as stepped notches and counters rendered as small rectangular apertures. Curves are translated into blocky diagonals and stair-steps, giving letters a grid-fitted, constructed feel. Spacing reads consistent in text, while individual glyphs show deliberate, game-like simplification and occasional stencil-style breaks in internal shapes.
Best suited to display settings where the pixel-modular texture is an asset: game UI, arcade-themed branding, event posters, album/track titles, and bold section headers. It holds up well in short text and large-scale applications, while extended body copy may feel visually dense due to the heavy, high-contrast block forms.
The overall tone is distinctly retro-digital, evoking arcade screens, early computer graphics, and sci‑fi interfaces. Its heavy, chunky silhouettes feel assertive and mechanical, with a playful 8‑bit character that leans more toward tech and gaming than corporate minimalism.
The font appears designed to emulate grid-based lettering from early digital and arcade contexts while maintaining a consistent, modernized construction. Its simplified geometry and intentional notches suggest an emphasis on impact, recognizability, and a distinctly digital voice in display typography.
The design relies on strong negative-space cuts (notably in E, S, and numerals) to keep dense shapes legible, producing a crisp black/white rhythm at larger sizes. Diagonal elements appear as stepped transitions rather than smooth joins, reinforcing the pixel aesthetic and giving the face a distinctly constructed texture.