Sans Other Olma 4 is a very bold, normal width, low contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: posters, logotypes, game ui, album covers, sports branding, techno, arcade, industrial, futuristic, aggressive, impact, tech aesthetic, display focus, branding edge, modular styling, blocky, geometric, angular, stencil-like, notched.
A heavy, geometric sans built from squared forms with crisp, chamfered corners and frequent notches that create a cut-out, almost stencil-like construction. Strokes are predominantly uniform and rectilinear, with diagonals appearing as sharp wedges rather than smooth joins. Counters are tight and often rectangular, and several glyphs use distinctive internal bars or slotted openings (notably in E-like forms and numerals), producing a mechanical, segmented rhythm. Overall spacing reads compact and dense in text, with strong silhouette emphasis and minimal curvature.
Best suited to short, high-impact settings such as posters, title cards, logos, game/interface labeling, and bold packaging or merchandise graphics. It holds attention at medium-to-large sizes where the notches and internal slots remain clearly legible, and it can add a strong technical flavor to display typography.
The font projects a synthetic, machine-made tone—part arcade display, part industrial signage. Its hard angles and carved-in details suggest speed, hardware, and sci‑fi interfaces, giving headlines a forceful, high-impact presence.
The design appears intended to deliver maximum visual punch through rigid geometry and carved details, balancing a modular construction with recognizable letterforms. The consistent cut-corner motif and slotted counters point to an aesthetic aimed at futuristic branding and display use where texture and silhouette matter more than neutrality.
Uppercase forms are especially rigid and modular, while lowercase introduces similarly angular structures with occasional open terminals that keep the texture lively. The numerals follow the same cut-corner logic, with segmented shapes that feel digital without being strictly seven-segment.