Sans Other Olla 6 is a very bold, wide, monoline, upright, short x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, logos, posters, gaming, ui, techno, arcade, industrial, futuristic, mechanical, retro tech, sci-fi display, interface styling, brand impact, square, angular, geometric, modular, stencil-like.
A modular, square-built sans with heavy, uniform strokes and hard 90° corners. Counters and apertures are predominantly rectangular, with frequent notch cuts and clipped joins that create a segmented, almost stencil-like construction. Round forms are rendered as squared loops (notably in O/0 and related shapes), and diagonals appear mainly as sharp, faceted cuts rather than smooth slants. The overall rhythm is compact and blocky, with tight internal spacing and a strong pixel-grid sensibility that stays consistent across capitals, lowercase, and numerals.
Best suited for display applications where its blocky geometry can read clearly: headlines, logos, titles, posters, game branding, and interface-style graphics. It can also work for short labels or tech-themed packaging where a mechanical, grid-based voice is desirable.
The font conveys a distinctly techno, arcade, and sci‑fi tone—precise, synthetic, and engineered. Its squared geometry and cut-in details suggest digital interfaces, machinery labeling, and retro-futurist display typography rather than everyday text.
The design appears intended to translate a pixel/terminal-era sensibility into a clean vector display font, prioritizing strong silhouette, modular consistency, and a futuristic industrial flavor for attention-grabbing typography.
Distinctive internal cutouts and stepped terminals give many letters a constructed, sign-system feel, increasing personality but also making similar shapes more dependent on context at smaller sizes. Numerals match the same rectilinear logic, reinforcing a cohesive, system-like texture in mixed alphanumeric settings.