Sans Other Regut 6 is a very bold, very narrow, low contrast, upright, normal x-height font visually similar to 'Chargeback' by PizzaDude.dk (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: posters, headlines, branding, packaging, album covers, quirky, assertive, retro, playful, angular, attention-grabbing, display impact, handcut feel, compact headlines, condensed, blocky, irregular, stencil-like, geometric.
A condensed, heavy sans with tightly packed proportions and a deliberately uneven, hand-cut rhythm. Strokes are blocky and mostly uniform, with small notches, stepped corners, and wedge-like cuts that make many counters and terminals feel carved rather than smoothly drawn. The glyphs sit upright but show subtle side-to-side distortions and width inconsistencies, creating a lively texture across lines. Counters are generally small and rectangular, and the overall silhouette reads as tall, compressed, and emphatic.
Best suited for short, high-impact display settings such as posters, event graphics, packaging callouts, and distinctive branding wordmarks. It can work well in large sizes where the carved details and irregular rhythm are clearly visible; it is less appropriate for dense body text or small UI sizes where counters may close up.
The font projects a quirky, poster-like energy that feels playful yet forceful. Its angular, chiseled shapes suggest a DIY or cutout aesthetic, giving headlines a slightly mischievous, off-kilter character rather than a polished corporate tone.
The design appears intended to deliver bold, attention-grabbing typography with a handcrafted, cut-paper/cut-wood feel while staying within a simplified sans structure. Its controlled narrowness and consistent weight support compact, high-contrast-in-scale headlines that still feel informal and characterful.
Spacing and shapes appear intentionally non-uniform, which produces a strong vertical rhythm but a lively, jittery word image. The numeral set follows the same carved, condensed construction, maintaining a consistent display voice across letters and figures.