Sans Other Rofo 13 is a bold, normal width, monoline, upright, tall x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, logos, game ui, packaging, techno, arcade, industrial, utilitarian, futuristic, impact, digital ui, retro tech, systemized, signage, square, angular, stencil-like, modular, pixel-adjacent.
A rigid, modular sans built from straight strokes and sharp corners, with a strongly squared silhouette and minimal curvature. Counters are typically rectangular or slit-like, and many joins resolve as hard 90° turns, creating a crisp, engineered rhythm. The forms read as constructed from a consistent stroke system, with occasional cut-ins and openings that give several letters a stencil-like, segmented feel; diagonals appear selectively in characters like K, M, N, V, W, X, and Y. Spacing and proportions are compact and vertical, producing a dense, blocky texture that stays highly uniform across uppercase, lowercase, and figures.
Best suited to display sizes where the angular construction and tight counters can be appreciated—headlines, posters, wordmarks, and tech-leaning branding. It also works well for on-screen UI elements in games or interface mockups where a modular, terminal-like voice is desired; for long passages of small text, the dense apertures may benefit from generous sizing and spacing.
The overall tone is mechanical and digital-forward, evoking arcade UI, sci-fi interfaces, and industrial labeling. Its square geometry and clipped details feel assertive and functional, with a retro-tech edge that suggests hardware, terminals, or game typography rather than editorial warmth.
Likely designed to deliver a compact, high-impact sans with a constructed, grid-based logic, prioritizing a strong silhouette and a distinctly technical character over conventional text neutrality. The clipped shapes and squared counters aim to create instant recognition in short phrases and branding contexts.
Lowercase and uppercase share closely related construction, reinforcing a systemized, all-caps-adjacent feel even in mixed-case setting. Numerals and punctuation match the same rectilinear logic, helping headings and short strings maintain a consistent, signal-like presence.