Hollow Other Onno 6 is a very bold, normal width, low contrast, upright, tall x-height font.
Keywords: posters, headlines, logos, game ui, packaging, industrial, retro tech, arcade, mechanical, tactical, texture display, industrial feel, retro-tech styling, high impact, pixel-like, stencil-like, modular, boxy, square terminals.
A heavy, squared display face built from modular, rectilinear strokes with right-angle corners and largely uniform thickness. Counters are formed as cut-out rectangles, and the black strokes are peppered with small square/round-ish perforations that read like rivet holes or a film-perf texture, creating a distinctive hollowed, engineered look. Proportions are compact and tall in the lowercase, with blocky joins, simplified curves, and occasional stepped diagonals that keep the rhythm rigid and grid-oriented. Spacing and sidebearings feel display-tuned, with a consistent, monolithic color that becomes textured up close due to the internal knockouts.
Best suited for bold headlines, posters, title cards, and logo wordmarks where the perforated interior detail can be appreciated. It also fits game UI, tech-themed graphics, and packaging accents that benefit from a mechanical or industrial surface texture. For long-form reading or small captions, the interior cutouts may reduce clarity compared with a solid display face.
The overall tone feels industrial and machine-made, blending arcade-era digital geometry with a rugged, fabricated surface. The perforated cutouts add a sense of hardware, manufacturing, or utilitarian signage, giving the font a purposeful, slightly gritty tech flavor rather than a clean futuristic one.
The design appears intended to deliver maximum impact through heavy, modular letterforms while differentiating itself with patterned internal knockouts. The combination suggests a deliberate reference to fabricated materials or retro-tech display aesthetics, aiming for characterful texture without relying on contrast or slant.
The internal perforations create strong texture at larger sizes but can visually fill in at smaller sizes, so the design reads best when given enough scale for the cutouts to remain distinct. Straight-sided bowls and squared-off terminals reinforce a rigid, constructed personality across both cases and numerals.