Sans Other Sepe 10 is a regular weight, narrow, monoline, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, logotypes, brand marks, ui titles, techno, industrial, retro, digital, futuristic, display impact, tech aesthetic, geometric rigor, modular system, squared, angular, geometric, stencil-like, high-contrast corners.
A condensed, monoline sans with a strongly rectilinear construction. Strokes are uniform in weight and terminate in crisp right angles or short 45° bevels, producing a faceted, cut-metal feel. Curves are largely suppressed in favor of squared counters and boxy bowls, while diagonals appear sparingly and are handled as straight segments. The rhythm is tight and mechanical, with tall proportions, narrow apertures, and consistent modular spacing that reads like a set of engineered components rather than handwritten forms.
Best suited to display sizes where the angular corner work and squared counters remain clear: posters, game/tech branding, packaging accents, album art, and interface titles. It can also work for short captions or labels in industrial or futuristic layouts, but the tight apertures and rigid geometry make it less comfortable for long-form reading.
The overall tone is techno-industrial and slightly retro, evoking digital signage, sci‑fi interfaces, and arcade-era display lettering. Its sharp geometry and constrained curves give it a cold, precise voice that feels engineered and utilitarian rather than friendly or humanistic.
The design appears intended to translate a modular, machine-cut aesthetic into a compact sans, prioritizing sharp geometry, uniform stroke logic, and a distinctive sci‑fi/industrial voice for attention-grabbing typography.
Many shapes show intentional corner notches and chamfers that add a pseudo-stencil or fabricated quality, especially in joins and interior corners. Numerals and capitals share the same squared logic, helping the set feel cohesive in headlines and short strings where the angular details can be appreciated.