Sans Other Pebo 4 is a very bold, very wide, low contrast, italic, normal x-height font.
Keywords: esports, gaming, posters, headlines, sports branding, futuristic, techno, racing, aggressive, industrial, impact, speed, sci-fi, tech branding, display voice, angular, stencil-like, chamfered, slanted, extended.
A heavy, extended sans with a consistent forward slant and sharply chamfered corners throughout. Strokes are monolinear and geometric, with frequent diagonal cuts that create a pseudo-stencil feel—counters and joins often appear “notched” or segmented rather than smoothly continuous. The shapes favor squared bowls and boxy apertures, producing a compact internal rhythm despite the wide set. Terminals are hard and angled, and several glyphs use horizontal breaks or stepped geometry that reinforces a mechanical, engineered construction.
Best suited to display settings such as esports identities, game titles, sci‑fi UI callouts, motorsport or sports branding, and bold poster headlines. It can also work for short technical labels or packaging where a sharp, engineered voice is desired, but its stylization is strongest at larger sizes.
The overall tone is fast, synthetic, and high-energy, evoking motorsport graphics, sci‑fi interfaces, and late-20th/early-21st-century techno branding. The slant and sharp cuts add urgency and bite, while the broad proportions read as loud and assertive.
The design appears intended to deliver a high-impact, forward-moving sans with a distinctly technological silhouette, using chamfered corners and broken joins to suggest speed, machinery, and digital hardware. Its wide stance and consistent slant prioritize presence and momentum over conventional text-form simplicity.
Capitals and numerals share a consistent “cut-metal” logic, with distinctive angular diagonals in forms like K, M, N, and R and squared, framed counters in O/0-like shapes. The lowercase follows the same rigid geometry, and the figures are similarly stylized, making the design feel cohesive for display use where personality matters more than text neutrality.