Sans Other Rodi 9 is a regular weight, normal width, monoline, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, game ui, branding, packaging, tech, retro, game-like, industrial, futuristic, digital feel, modular system, geometric clarity, strong silhouettes, display impact, angular, modular, squared, geometric, boxy.
A squared, modular sans with monoline strokes and predominantly right angles. Terminals are blunt and corners are often chamfered, producing a crisp, pixel-adjacent silhouette without being strictly grid-pixel. Counters tend to be rectangular and compact, with consistent stroke rhythm and simplified joins. The overall construction favors geometric clarity over organic curves, yielding a clean, mechanical texture in both caps and lowercase.
This design is well suited to short-to-medium display settings where its angular forms can read as intentional style—headlines, posters, logotypes, and tech or gaming-themed interfaces. It can also work for labels and packaging where a crisp, machine-made aesthetic is desired, while longer text benefits from generous sizing and spacing to keep the tight rectangular counters open.
The font reads as tech-forward and utilitarian, with a distinctly retro-digital flavor reminiscent of early computer and arcade display lettering. Its sharp geometry and squared counters give it an engineered, industrial attitude that feels modern yet nostalgic.
The likely intention is to deliver a distinctive, screen-native geometric sans that feels precise and constructed, prioritizing strong silhouettes and a cohesive modular system. It aims to communicate a digital/industrial mood while remaining clean and legible in display use.
The lowercase echoes the cap structure closely, reinforcing a uniform, system-like voice across cases. Round letters are interpreted through straight segments and chamfers, creating a consistent, faceted vocabulary that stays steady across alphanumerics.