Sans Other Ohla 4 is a bold, normal width, low contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, logos, ui labels, signage, techno, industrial, arcade, mechanical, utilitarian, tech aesthetic, modular geometry, display impact, systematic forms, square, angular, geometric, blocky, compact.
A geometric sans built from squared, rectilinear strokes with a near-monoline feel and sharp, hard corners. Counters are mostly rectangular and open apertures are cut with crisp right angles, giving many letters a stencil-like, engineered construction. Proportions are compact with tight internal space, and several capitals lean on verticals and flat terminals for a rigid rhythm. Lowercase forms follow the same modular logic, with simplified bowls and straight-sided stems that keep the texture dense and uniform in text.
This design works best for short-to-medium display settings where its square geometry can be a feature: headlines, posters, branding marks, and tech or gaming themed graphics. It can also suit interface labels and signage where a firm, modular voice is desired, especially at sizes large enough to preserve its tight counters and angular details.
The overall tone is technical and game-like, with an industrial, machine-made confidence. Its angular construction and boxy counters evoke digital interfaces, arcade cabinets, and utilitarian labeling rather than soft or humanist warmth.
The font appears intended to deliver a modular, engineered sans voice with a distinctly angular silhouette. Its consistent rectilinear construction suggests a goal of creating a contemporary, tech-forward display face that remains cohesive across capitals, lowercase, and figures.
Diagonal elements (notably in A, K, V, W, X, Y) are handled as straight cuts that contrast with the predominantly orthogonal system, reinforcing a constructed, mechanical feel. Numerals are similarly squared and segmented, maintaining consistency with the caps and helping the font read as a cohesive display system.