Sans Other Otke 7 is a regular weight, very wide, monoline, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, logos, posters, ui labels, game titles, futuristic, techno, digital, industrial, arcade, sci-fi branding, interface styling, display impact, modular system, squared, angular, modular, geometric, stencil-like.
A geometric sans built from squared, modular strokes with consistently uniform line weight and crisp right-angle turns. Many counters are rectangular and open, and several joins use deliberate breaks that read as stencil-like cut-ins, giving the forms an engineered, segmented construction. Curves are minimized in favor of chamfered corners and straight segments, with occasional diagonals (notably in K, V, W, X) adding sharp rhythm. Proportions feel expansive and horizontal, with wide letter bodies, generous internal whitespace, and a clean, schematic baseline alignment in both uppercase and lowercase.
This font is best suited to large sizes where its segmented corners and rectangular counters remain clearly legible—headlines, branding marks, posters, and interface labeling. It can also work for short blocks of copy in tech or sci‑fi contexts, where the geometric texture becomes part of the visual identity rather than aiming for traditional body-text neutrality.
The overall tone is futuristic and machine-oriented, evoking digital interfaces, sci‑fi labeling, and arcade-era display typography. The squared geometry and segmented joins create a technical, constructed feel that reads confident and utilitarian rather than friendly or calligraphic.
The design appears intended to deliver a modular, engineered sans with a strong sci‑fi/tech voice, prioritizing distinctive geometry and repeatable stroke patterns for display use. The stencil-like breaks and squared apertures suggest an emphasis on constructed letterforms that feel systematized and contemporary.
Distinctive glyph logic comes through in the squared O/0 and the rectangular, open E/F/S constructions, which emphasize horizontal strokes and clear modular repetition. The lowercase maintains the same hard-edged system as the uppercase, supporting a cohesive, display-forward texture in longer lines of text.