Sans Other Veve 2 is a very bold, wide, low contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: logos, headlines, posters, game ui, sports graphics, techno, arcade, sci-fi, industrial, aggressive, futuristic branding, impact display, digital interface, modular aesthetic, squared, angular, blocky, stencil-like, modular.
A heavy, geometric sans built from squared, modular strokes with consistently rounded outer corners and sharp internal notches. Counters are compact and mostly rectangular, and many letters use cut-in apertures that create a stencil-like, segmented feel. The overall rhythm is dense and mechanical, with short crossbars and clipped terminals that keep silhouettes tight and boxy. Distinctive constructions appear throughout (e.g., a boxy O, an angular S, and a Q with a small inset tail), reinforcing a designed, display-first character.
Best suited to short, high-impact settings such as logos, titles, posters, packaging callouts, game UI, and sci‑fi or tech event graphics. It also works well for labels, scoreboard-like numerals, and interface headers where a strong, engineered look is desirable, but it is less ideal for body text due to its dense, segmented forms.
The font reads as futuristic and game-oriented, with a rugged, engineered tone. Its notched detailing and blocky geometry suggest digital hardware, arcade interfaces, and sci‑fi branding, projecting confidence and intensity rather than softness or neutrality.
The design appears intended to deliver a compact, powerful display voice with a distinctly digital/industrial flavor. By using squared geometry, rounded corners, and repeated notches, it aims to create a recognizable, futuristic texture that holds up in bold branding and screen-oriented contexts.
Lowercase forms largely echo the uppercase structure, giving mixed-case settings a uniform, techno texture. The numerals follow the same squared, segmented logic, which supports a cohesive UI/scoreboard aesthetic. The distinctive notch-and-slab pattern can become visually busy in long passages, especially where many letters stack similar horizontal cuts.