Sans Other Jadaz 3 is a regular weight, normal width, monoline, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, logos, posters, branding, ui display, futuristic, techno, modular, geometric, retro, tech aesthetic, distinctiveness, systematic geometry, display impact, rounded corners, squared curves, open counters, angular terminals, stencil-like.
A geometric sans built from monoline strokes with squared curves and softly rounded corners. Many letters use open or partially open counters and clipped joins, creating a segmented, constructed look while keeping a consistent stroke rhythm. Curves tend to resolve into flat horizontals/verticals rather than fully circular bowls, and terminals are frequently straight-cut, producing a crisp, engineered texture. Numerals and lowercase echo the same modular construction, with simplified forms and occasional gaps that read as stencil-like interruptions rather than calligraphic modulation.
Best suited to display sizes such as headlines, posters, logos, and brand marks where the segmented geometry can be appreciated. It also works well for UI titles, dashboards, and tech-themed graphics where a constructed, system-like aesthetic is desirable; for long body text, the unconventional openings and clipped forms may reduce smooth readability.
The overall tone feels futuristic and tech-oriented, with a retro sci‑fi flavor reminiscent of signage and interface typography. Its constructed geometry reads confident and mechanical, projecting a sleek, synthetic voice rather than a neutral everyday sans.
The font appears designed to translate geometric, grid-based construction into a clean sans framework, prioritizing a distinctive techno voice while keeping stroke weight even and forms systematically repeatable. Its letterforms suggest an intention to feel modern and engineered, with signature open shapes that create strong recognition at a glance.
The design emphasizes distinctive silhouettes over conventional text shapes, so individual characters can feel stylized in running copy. The uppercase set appears especially emblematic and display-forward, while the lowercase maintains the same structural logic for cohesive branding.