Sans Other Fari 6 is a very bold, wide, medium contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, logos, game ui, album art, retro, arcade, industrial, techy, playful, pixel aesthetic, display impact, tech branding, graphic texture, blocky, pixelated, modular, square, angular.
A chunky modular sans built from squared, orthogonal shapes with crisp right angles and small stepped cut-ins. Counters are tight and often rectangular, with distinctive notch-like apertures that create a pixel-grid rhythm across the alphabet. Strokes keep a consistent, heavy presence while letter widths vary noticeably, producing a punchy texture in words and a clear separation between glyphs. Curves are largely avoided in favor of faceted, stair-step geometry, giving both uppercase and lowercase a deliberately constructed, stencil-like feel.
Best suited to display settings such as headlines, posters, logos, game UI, and punchy branding where its block geometry can be a graphic feature. It also works well for short, high-impact phrases and titles that benefit from a retro-tech texture rather than conventional text readability.
The overall tone reads retro-digital and game-like, with an arcade/8-bit energy that feels bold, mechanical, and slightly mischievous. Its squared notches and compact counters suggest a techno-industrial attitude while still feeling playful due to the exaggerated, blocky silhouettes.
The font appears intended to translate pixel and grid-based aesthetics into a solid, print-ready display sans, emphasizing constructed forms, squared counters, and a strong modular rhythm. Its varied widths and repeated notch motifs aim to create a distinctive word shape and a memorable, game-inspired voice.
The design’s identity comes from repeated interior cutouts and stepped terminals, which create strong patterning at text sizes. Because the counters are small and the shapes are dense, the font’s character is clearest when given ample size and spacing where the notches and internal gaps can remain distinct.