Sans Other Ryray 6 is a bold, normal width, low contrast, upright, short x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, branding, logos, packaging, techno, industrial, retro, utilitarian, game-like, tech aesthetic, display impact, modular design, retro-futurism, square, angular, stencil-like, geometric, modular.
A blocky, modular sans built from squared-off strokes and crisp right angles. Many curves are simplified into chamfered corners and rectangular counters, giving letters a pixel-adjacent, constructed feel rather than smooth geometry. Stroke endings are blunt and uniform, with occasional notched or inset details in bowls and terminals that read as stencil-inspired cut-ins. The overall rhythm is tight and mechanical, with compact lowercase forms and a strong, grid-based presence in both caps and numerals.
Best suited to display settings where its angular construction can read clearly at larger sizes—headlines, posters, logos, and brand marks with a technical or futuristic theme. It also works well for short UI-style labels, game titles, and packaging callouts where a modular, engineered look is desirable.
The font projects a technical, industrial tone with a distinctly retro-digital flavor. Its squared proportions and cut-in details evoke arcade interfaces, sci‑fi labeling, and engineered signage, producing an assertive, no-nonsense voice that feels intentionally synthetic rather than humanist.
The design appears intended to deliver a constructed, grid-driven sans with a distinctive techno character. By replacing curves with squared forms and adding subtle cut-ins, it aims to create a recognizable display voice for contemporary tech and retro-future contexts.
Distinctive inset counters and occasional corner chamfers create a signature texture, especially noticeable in letters with bowls and in the numerals. The lowercase keeps a compact silhouette, and the squared punctuation and strong verticals reinforce an interface-like, systemy aesthetic.