Sans Other Onmu 7 is a very bold, very wide, low contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, logotypes, posters, gaming, sci‑fi ui, techno, industrial, retro, display impact, tech aesthetic, retro futurism, brand distinctiveness, angular, geometric, squared, stencil-like, modular.
A heavy, squared sans with a modular, rectilinear build and sharply cut corners. Letterforms are constructed from thick, flat strokes with minimal curvature, relying on notches, step-cuts, and occasional inset counters (notably in round characters like O and Q) to suggest internal space. The rhythm is compact and blocky, with broad proportions and simplified joins; diagonals appear as angular wedges rather than smooth slants. Counters are small and often rectangular, and punctuation/figures follow the same hard-edged, engineered logic.
Best suited to headlines, titles, and branding where its blocky geometry can be read at larger sizes. It works well for game graphics, tech packaging, event posters, and futuristic interface motifs, and can add a strong industrial accent to short labels or badges.
The overall tone feels techno and industrial, evoking arcade-era display lettering and sci‑fi interface graphics. Its aggressive, mechanical silhouettes read as bold and utilitarian, with a retro-futuristic edge that suggests speed, hardware, and engineered precision.
The font appears designed to deliver maximum visual punch through modular, squared forms and distinctive cut-in details, aiming for a recognizable, tech-forward display voice rather than neutral body text. Its consistent use of right angles, stepped terminals, and compact rectangular counters suggests an intention to mimic machine-cut or pixel-adjacent construction while remaining clean and solid.
Several glyphs lean into stylized construction—such as the boxy O with a small inset counter, the angular S and Z, and stepped terminals on letters like E/F—creating a distinctive, almost stencil-cut flavor. The design prioritizes silhouette impact over conventional text readability, especially at smaller sizes where the tight counters and notches can fill in.