Sans Other Nyvi 2 is a very bold, wide, low contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, game ui, logos, packaging, industrial, arcade, techno, retro, assertive, impact, tech feel, retro digital, modular display, branding, blocky, angular, squared, compact, stencil-like.
A heavy, block-built sans with squared counters, sharp corners, and frequent diagonal cuts that create a faceted silhouette. Strokes are uniform and monolinear, with geometry leaning toward rectangles and trapezoids rather than curves. Many glyphs use small, rectangular apertures and internal cut-ins that read like notches, giving a constructed, almost modular feel. The lowercase follows the same angular logic as the caps, with simplified forms and sturdy terminals that keep texture dense and consistent in display settings.
Best suited to large-scale display use such as headlines, posters, title cards, and branding marks where its angular construction can read clearly. It can also work for game UI labels, esports or tech-themed graphics, and packaging accents that need a tough, engineered presence. For long passages or small text, the dense counters and sharp detailing may feel heavy.
The overall tone is bold and mechanical, with a distinctly retro-digital attitude reminiscent of arcade graphics and hard-edged industrial labeling. Its jagged facets and inset cuts add a confrontational energy that feels engineered rather than friendly, pushing a techno or game-title mood.
The design appears intended to deliver maximum impact with a geometric, cut-out construction that signals technology and manufactured surfaces. Its consistent monoline structure and squared detailing suggest a deliberate move away from conventional grotesks toward a more emblematic, arcade/industrial display voice.
Because counters and apertures are small and the forms are highly stylized, readability can drop quickly at small sizes, while the strong shapes hold up well when scaled large. The diagonal chamfers and notch-like details create a lively rhythm across words, especially in all-caps lines.