Sans Other Roby 3 is a bold, normal width, monoline, upright, normal x-height font visually similar to 'Exabyte' by Pepper Type (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: headlines, posters, logotypes, game ui, tech branding, techno, arcade, sci-fi, industrial, futuristic, retro-future, digital feel, ui display, geometric voice, rectilinear, angular, squared, pixel-like, geometric.
A rectilinear, geometric sans built from uniform stroke widths and sharp right-angle turns. Curves are largely suppressed in favor of squared corners and clipped diagonals, giving counters a boxy, modular feel. Proportions are compact with a steady cap height and a medium x-height, while glyph widths vary for a natural text rhythm despite the rigid construction. Terminals are flat and abrupt, and interior spaces tend to be narrow, emphasizing a dense, high-contrast silhouette against the page.
Best suited to display settings such as headlines, posters, and identity marks where its angular geometry can carry personality. It also fits game interfaces, sci‑fi themed graphics, and tech-forward branding, especially when paired with simple layouts and generous spacing.
The overall tone feels digital and engineered—reminiscent of arcade UI, retro computing, and futuristic signage. Its strict grid logic and squared forms read as controlled and utilitarian, with a playful retro-tech edge in longer sample text.
The font appears designed to translate a grid-based, digital aesthetic into a clean sans system that remains readable in words and sentences. Its consistent stroke logic and squared counters suggest an intention to evoke retro-futurism while preserving enough variation in widths to support continuous text at display sizes.
Distinctive angular joins and occasional chamfered corners help differentiate similar shapes, while maintaining a consistent, modular voice across uppercase, lowercase, and numerals. The design favors strong silhouettes and clear vertical/horizontal structure, which makes it most striking at larger sizes where the stepped geometry is easy to perceive.