Sans Other Eple 9 is a very bold, wide, medium contrast, upright, tall x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, logos, game ui, packaging, industrial, arcade, brutalist, techno, playful, maximum impact, retro-digital, industrial display, stylized modularity, blocky, squared, stencil-like, chunky, angular.
A heavy, block-built sans with squared geometry and blunt terminals. Forms are constructed from rectangular masses with tight, angular joins and frequent notched cuts, giving many counters a boxed or slit-like appearance. Curves are minimized in favor of straight segments; diagonals appear in select letters (such as A, K, V, W, X, Y) but are treated with the same chiseled, pixel-adjacent logic. The rhythm is compact and punchy, with substantial black area and crisp interior cutouts that stay consistent across uppercase, lowercase, and numerals.
Best suited to large-scale settings where its solid shapes and distinctive cut-ins can read clearly: headlines, posters, branding marks, and bold packaging. It also fits interface titles or HUD-style labels in game and tech contexts, and works well for short bursts of text where a compact, high-impact texture is desired.
The overall tone reads assertive and mechanical, with a distinctly game-like, industrial edge. The squared counters and carved notches suggest digital signage, arcade titles, and retro-tech graphics, while the extreme weight adds a loud, poster-ready presence. Despite the severity, the stylized cuts give it a playful, constructed personality rather than a purely utilitarian one.
The design appears intended to deliver maximum impact through dense, squared construction and consistent chiseled details, creating a recognizable silhouette at a glance. Its geometry emphasizes a retro-digital, industrial display flavor, prioritizing presence and stylistic cohesion over conventional text neutrality.
Lowercase follows the same architectural language as uppercase, producing a near-uniform texture in paragraphs that feels more like a display face than a conventional text sans. The numerals are similarly block-formed, favoring hard corners and rectangular apertures, which keeps the set cohesive for headings and numeric callouts.