Sans Other Ollo 3 is a bold, normal width, monoline, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: game ui, sci-fi titles, posters, logos, headlines, techno, arcade, industrial, futuristic, tactical, futurism, interface feel, impact, mechanical tone, display clarity, pixelated, angular, blocky, modular, stencil-like.
A heavy, modular sans built from straight strokes and sharp corners, with frequent diagonal chamfers that cut into terminals and corners. Counters are mostly rectangular and tightly enclosed, giving many letters a compact, armored silhouette; curves are largely avoided in favor of orthogonal geometry. The overall rhythm is boxy and segmented, with occasional notches and angled joins that create a mechanical, constructed feel. Spacing appears steady in text, while individual glyph widths vary with the design’s modular construction.
Best suited to display typography where its angular construction and dense mass can carry personality: game and esports branding, sci‑fi or cyber-themed titles, poster headlines, tech event graphics, and interface-style callouts. It can work for short labels and navigation elements when set large enough to preserve the interior shapes.
The font conveys a distinctly digital, game-like attitude—equal parts techno and utilitarian. Its clipped corners and squared counters suggest control panels, sci‑fi interfaces, and industrial labeling, producing a confident, assertive tone rather than a friendly one.
The design appears intended to deliver a futuristic, system-like voice using a strict rectilinear framework, emphasizing clarity through simplified geometry and consistent stroke construction. Chamfered corners and squared counters add a distinctive signature while keeping the overall letterforms straightforward and utilitarian.
Distinctive chamfers and occasional cut-in notches function like built-in styling cues, helping differentiate similar forms while reinforcing the engineered aesthetic. The texture becomes quite dense at smaller sizes due to the tight counters and heavy strokes, but reads clearly as a display face in larger settings.