Sans Other Olso 8 is a very bold, normal width, monoline, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: game ui, headlines, posters, logos, packaging, techno, arcade, industrial, sci‑fi, stencil-like, futuristic tone, high impact, ui styling, modular build, octagonal, angular, square counters, modular, geometric.
A blocky, geometric sans built from straight strokes and sharp 45° cuts, giving many glyphs chamfered corners and a distinctly octagonal silhouette. Counters tend to be square or rectangular, with frequent open apertures (notably in forms like C, G, and several numerals) and occasional notch-like terminals that read as stencil-inspired detailing. The lowercase follows a compact, engineered construction with single-storey a and g, squared bowls, and minimal curvature throughout. Overall spacing and rhythm feel modular and grid-aware, producing strong, high-contrast letter-shapes even at smaller sizes.
Best suited for display contexts where a bold, technical personality is desired: game and app interfaces, sci‑fi or industrial-themed titles, posters, esports/event graphics, and compact wordmarks. It can also work for short labels or packaging callouts where a rugged, engineered look helps hierarchy and impact.
The font projects a futuristic, game-interface attitude—mechanical, assertive, and slightly retro-digital. Its angular cuts and squared counters evoke hardware labeling, arcade typography, and sci‑fi UI graphics, lending a confident, utilitarian tone.
The design appears intended to translate a modular, machined aesthetic into a readable sans alphabet, emphasizing crisp corners, squared counters, and chamfered terminals for a distinctly digital/industrial flavor in headlines and UI-style typography.
Diagonal joins are used sparingly but decisively (e.g., in K, V, W, X, Y), while many horizontals and verticals end in clipped corners rather than true right angles. Numerals keep the same squared logic, with open, segmented-style constructions that reinforce a technical, display-forward voice.