Sans Other Syku 2 is a light, very wide, monoline, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: display, headlines, branding, logos, posters, tech, futuristic, modular, precise, minimal, sci-fi styling, modular system, digital feel, geometric clarity, geometric, rectilinear, angular, squared, stencil-like.
A geometric, rectilinear sans built from straight strokes and squared corners, with occasional diagonal joins for letters like M, N, V, W, X, and Y. Curves are largely replaced by chamfered or boxed forms, producing squared counters (notably in O and similar shapes) and a modular, grid-driven construction. Stroke endings are clean and uniform, giving the design a crisp, engineered rhythm, with simplified, segmented constructions in several glyphs that read as deliberately schematic rather than calligraphic.
Best suited to display settings where its geometric construction and squared counters can read clearly—headlines, posters, tech branding, game titles, and UI/wayfinding accents. It can work for short passages in large sizes, but the schematic detailing and tight apertures make it less comfortable for extended small-size reading.
The overall tone is techno and forward-looking, with a distinctly engineered, sci‑fi flavor. Its angular, boxy forms convey precision and control, leaning more “interface” than “editorial.”
The design appears intended to translate a modular, grid-based aesthetic into a clean sans voice, prioritizing futuristic character and structural consistency over traditional readability cues. Its boxy forms and segmented strokes suggest an aim toward digital, architectural, or industrial themes.
Several capitals emphasize open or segmented strokes (e.g., E/F/C-like forms), which increases the technical feel but can reduce legibility at smaller sizes. The lowercase maintains the same squared logic, with single-storey constructions and compact apertures that keep the texture consistent across mixed-case text.