Hollow Other Upti 5 is a very bold, wide, high contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: posters, headlines, game ui, album art, logos, sci‑fi, industrial, futuristic, techno, aggressive, sci‑fi styling, machined look, dimensional effect, display impact, texture detail, faceted, beveled, chiseled, angular, segmented.
A heavy, angular display face built from blocky, straight-edged forms with pronounced cut-ins and hollowed facets that read like beveled or machined surfaces. Strokes are mostly rectilinear with sharp corners, frequent diagonal chamfers, and internal knockouts that create a dimensional, carved effect. Curves are largely avoided in favor of squared bowls and stepped joins, and several glyphs show intentional fracture-like slashes that add texture. The overall construction feels modular but not strictly monoline, with contrasting solid masses and crisp negative spaces driving the letterforms.
Best suited for short, high-impact settings such as posters, titles, game or sci‑fi interface graphics, album covers, and logo/wordmark work where its carved, faceted details can be appreciated. It can also function for thematic signage or packaging accents, but is less appropriate for extended body copy due to its dense internal detailing.
The font conveys a hard-edged, engineered tone—evoking sci‑fi interfaces, armored plating, and industrial signage. Its faceted interiors and sharp geometry give it a tense, energetic presence that feels bold, technical, and slightly hostile.
The design appears intended to mimic cut metal or crystal-like facets by combining chunky outer silhouettes with deliberate internal hollows and chamfered corners. The added slash-like breaks suggest a distressed, battle-worn or glitchy surface treatment while maintaining a controlled geometric structure.
In the sample text, the interior cutouts and small notches become prominent at smaller sizes, producing a busy surface texture; the design reads best when given room. The distinctive bevel/knockout motif is consistently applied across caps, lowercase, and numerals, giving the set a cohesive, stylized voice.