Sans Other Nyfi 3 is a very bold, wide, low contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: posters, headlines, logotypes, packaging, game ui, playful, rugged, quirky, bold, urban, high impact, hand-cut feel, display emphasis, distinct voice, blocky, angular, chiseled, irregular, compact.
A heavy, block-built sans with angular, chiseled contours and deliberate irregularity in stroke edges and joins. Counters are generally small and geometric, often appearing as squared cutouts, while terminals look clipped or notched rather than cleanly squared. The letterforms keep an upright stance but show subtle wobble and unevenness in silhouettes, creating a rough-hewn, hand-cut feel. Overall spacing reads tight and dense, with strong black mass and simplified interior detail that holds up best at larger sizes.
Best suited to display roles such as posters, event graphics, punchy headlines, and branding marks that benefit from a bold, handcrafted look. It can work well on packaging and apparel graphics where strong silhouettes are needed from a distance. For body text, it’s more effective in short bursts—labels, buttons, or emphasis lines—rather than sustained reading.
The font projects a playful, punchy attitude with a slightly gritty, DIY energy. Its uneven cuts and chunky shapes suggest street graphics, indie posters, and game-like display lettering rather than formal typography. The tone is assertive and cartoon-adjacent, with a mischievous, off-kilter character.
The design appears intended to deliver maximum impact through chunky geometry and intentionally rough, cut-paper or carved-stencil irregularities. Its simplified shapes and tight, emphatic rhythm aim to create an instantly recognizable voice for energetic, informal visual systems.
Distinctive notches and asymmetries appear across many glyphs, giving the set a cohesive “carved” texture while keeping each character visually unique. Numerals follow the same blocky construction and feel designed to match headlines and short callouts. In longer paragraphs the dense shapes and small counters can reduce readability, especially at smaller sizes.