Sans Other Wizi 15 is a bold, wide, very high contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, branding, logotypes, album art, futuristic, techno, industrial, digital, modular, sci-fi display, modular system, high impact, graphic texture, constructed forms, geometric, rectilinear, stencil-like, inline cuts, monoline stems.
A rectilinear, modular sans built from heavy horizontal bars paired with very thin vertical stems and occasional diagonal joins. Corners are squared, curves are largely suppressed, and counters often appear as clean rectangular cutouts or inline gaps carved out of solid strokes. Several letters use open forms and “hanging” hairline terminals, creating a constructed, stencil-like feel with strong baseline and cap-line emphasis. Widths vary noticeably from glyph to glyph, but the overall rhythm stays consistent through repeated bar-and-stem motifs and uniform right angles.
Best suited to display contexts where its architectural construction and segmented details can be appreciated: headlines, posters, cover art, event graphics, and technology-leaning brand systems. It can work for short UI labels or signage when set large enough to preserve the thin stems and interior cuts, and when generous tracking is available.
The design reads as futuristic and machine-made, with a digital/industrial voice that feels engineered rather than handwritten. Its dramatic bar-to-stem contrast and segmented interiors evoke sci-fi interfaces, arcade-era graphics, and modular signage. The tone is assertive and slightly experimental, prioritizing impact and personality over conventional text neutrality.
The letterforms appear designed to explore an atypical sans construction built from modular bars and hairline supports, delivering a high-impact, futuristic texture. The consistent use of rectangular cutouts and open terminals suggests an intention to create a distinctive, engineered identity for display typography rather than a conventional reading face.
At smaller sizes, the hairline verticals and interior gaps can become visually delicate compared to the dominant horizontals, so spacing and size choices will strongly affect clarity. The distinctive inline cutouts add texture and motion, but also create a busy surface in dense setting, especially where multiple bars stack within a glyph.