Sans Other Tisa 4 is a light, normal width, monoline, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, branding, ui labels, gaming, techy, retro, futuristic, industrial, game-like, digital aesthetic, modular construction, technical voice, display impact, angular, square, octagonal, modular, geometric.
A geometric, modular sans built from straight strokes and crisp 90° corners, with occasional clipped diagonals that create octagonal counters. Stems and bars stay consistently linear and open, producing squared bowls and boxy apertures; curves are largely avoided in favor of rectilinear construction. Proportions are slightly condensed with tall capitals, and the lowercase echoes the same architecture with simplified, squared forms and clean, minimal terminals. Numerals follow the same grid-like logic, with sharply cornered shapes and a distinctly constructed, technical rhythm.
Well-suited to headlines, posters, and identity work that wants a futuristic or industrial voice. It also fits interface labels, HUD-style graphics, and game or tech-themed packaging where a grid-driven, constructed look supports the message.
The overall tone feels technical and purpose-built, evoking retro-digital interfaces and utilitarian signage. Its hard corners and modular repetition give it a precise, engineered character with a subtle sci‑fi and arcade sensibility.
The design appears intended to translate a pixel/grid mindset into clean vector outlines: a square-built sans with faceted corners that signals technology and precision while staying legible in short bursts of text.
Several letters introduce subtle diagonal cuts (notably in rounded characters) to break up strict rectangles, adding a faceted, “machined” feel. The design reads best at display sizes where the angular detailing and squared counters remain clearly separated.