Sans Other Baloh 9 is a bold, narrow, medium contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, logos, ui labels, packaging, techno, industrial, futuristic, arcade, modular, sci-fi styling, systematic geometry, display impact, technical labeling, numeric clarity, squared, monolinear, geometric, condensed, angular.
A compact, squared sans with monolinear strokes and a strongly rectilinear build. Corners are predominantly right-angled with occasional chamfered cuts, giving many glyphs a constructed, modular feel. Counters tend to be boxy and tight, and curves are minimized or simplified into rounded-rectangle forms. Terminals are blunt and uniform, producing a crisp, mechanical rhythm with narrow proportions and relatively dense internal spacing.
Best suited to headlines, posters, logos/wordmarks, and short UI labels where a compact, technological voice is desired. It also works well for packaging, signage, and on-screen graphics that benefit from a rigid, engineered look and clear numeral differentiation.
The overall tone reads technical and futuristic, with a retro-digital edge reminiscent of arcade, sci‑fi interface, and industrial labeling aesthetics. Its rigid geometry and clipped details convey precision, machinery, and a slightly dystopian or cyberpunk atmosphere.
The design appears intended to deliver a constructed, digital-industrial aesthetic using a modular geometry and squared counters, prioritizing characterful display impact and a consistent mechanical rhythm across letters and numerals.
Uppercase forms are especially architectural, while lowercase introduces a few distinctive, stylized structures that reinforce the “designed system” feel rather than a conventional text face. Numerals follow the same squared logic, including a slashed zero that improves differentiation in code-like contexts. In longer lines, the tight counters and angular joins create a high-contrast texture between black shapes and negative space, favoring display use over small reading sizes.