Sans Other Jiha 9 is a bold, wide, monoline, upright, tall x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, logos, gaming ui, packaging, futuristic, tech, arcade, industrial, mechanical, sci-fi branding, display impact, system aesthetic, tech signage, square, angular, corner-cut, modular, geometric.
A square, modular sans built from uniform strokes and hard right angles, with frequent 45° corner cuts that sharpen terminals and inside joints. Counters tend to be rectangular and compact, and curves are largely replaced by chamfered geometry, giving letters a constructed, pixel-adjacent feel without true bitmap steps. The lowercase follows the same engineered logic with simple, boxy bowls and short joins, while diagonals (as in K, V, W, X, Y) are straight and clean, maintaining consistent stroke behavior across the set. Figures are similarly rectilinear and tightly structured, with segmented forms and flat, horizontal bars.
Well-suited to headlines, brand marks, and poster typography where a strong, tech-forward voice is desired. It also fits on-screen uses like game/UI titles, dashboard-style graphics, and product or packaging applications that benefit from a mechanical, modular look.
The overall tone reads synthetic and utilitarian, evoking sci‑fi interfaces, arcade cabinets, and machinery labeling. Its crisp corners and modular rhythm feel assertive and technical rather than friendly or expressive, with a controlled, system-like presence.
The design appears intended to translate a geometric, constructed letterform language into a cohesive sans for display use, prioritizing sharp modularity, consistent stroke logic, and a futuristic industrial mood.
Round letters such as C, G, O, and S are rendered as squared constructions with notched or open corners, emphasizing a stencil-like, engineered aesthetic. The texture stays even in longer text, though the compact counters and sharp joins create a dense, high-impact color best suited to confident settings.