Sans Other Obmo 7 is a very bold, normal width, low contrast, upright, tall x-height font.
Keywords: posters, headlines, logos, game ui, packaging, arcade, industrial, sci-fi, brutalist, playful, impact, retro tech, display branding, ui styling, industrial feel, blocky, geometric, angular, stencil-like, square counters.
A heavy, block-constructed sans built from squared forms and abrupt angles. Strokes are monolinear with hard corners, tight apertures, and mostly rectangular counters, creating a compact, pixel-adjacent rhythm without being strictly grid/pixel constrained. Many joins and terminals are chamfered or notched, lending a cut-metal, stencil-like feel, while proportions stay generally tall with firm vertical emphasis. Numerals and punctuation follow the same rigid geometry, maintaining a consistent, modular texture in text.
Best suited to large-scale applications where its chunky geometry can read cleanly—display headlines, posters, brand marks, and packaging with a bold, technical stance. It also fits game UI, streamer overlays, and event graphics that want an arcade/sci‑fi flavor, provided sizes are generous and spacing is handled to avoid crowding.
The overall tone is assertive and mechanical, with a retro-digital edge reminiscent of arcade titles, sci‑fi interfaces, and industrial signage. Its chunky silhouettes feel confident and utilitarian, while the quirky notches and squared inner spaces add a playful, game-like character.
The font appears designed to deliver maximum impact through solid, geometric letterforms with deliberate notches and squared counters, evoking industrial fabrication and retro-digital display aesthetics. The intention seems focused on distinctive, high-energy display typography rather than neutral text settings.
The design favors strong silhouette recognition over open readability: counters are small and apertures are narrow, so the texture becomes dense at smaller sizes. The distinctive cut-ins and stepped diagonals add personality and motion, especially in caps and round-adjacent shapes, which are rendered as faceted, squared constructions rather than curves.