Sans Other Selo 4 is a bold, very narrow, monoline, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, logos, game ui, signage, techno, industrial, retro, arcade, mechanical, compact impact, technical voice, retro-future styling, grid discipline, condensed, angular, boxy, geometric, modular.
A tightly condensed, modular sans with straight-sided construction and squared curves throughout. Strokes stay consistently heavy with crisp right-angle terminals, producing a stencil-like, machine-cut feel despite being solid. Counters are mostly rectangular and compact, with frequent notch-like joins and stepped diagonals (notably in K, R, S, Z, and 2/5), and the round letters (O, C, G) are rendered as squarish forms with clipped corners. Proportions emphasize tall ascenders and narrow widths, and spacing remains even and disciplined for a rigid, grid-aligned rhythm.
Best suited to short display settings such as headlines, posters, branding wordmarks, game/UI titling, and industrial or wayfinding-style signage. It can also work for labels and packaging where a compact, technical voice is desired, while long-form text may feel dense due to the narrow set and tight counters.
The overall tone is utilitarian and futuristic, evoking industrial labeling, digital-era display type, and classic arcade or sci‑fi interfaces. Its strict geometry and compressed stance read as assertive and technical, with a slightly retro computer-terminal flavor.
The design appears intended to deliver a compact, high-impact display voice built from strict geometric rules. Its stepped diagonals, squared curves, and consistent stroke treatment suggest a deliberate “engineered” aesthetic aimed at conveying speed, precision, and a retro-futuristic sensibility.
Distinctive details include a rectangular, almost slit-like approach to bowls and counters, a compact, squared “O/0” silhouette, and simplified punctuation and numerals that match the same stepped geometry. The dense black texture makes it most confident at larger sizes, where the angular interior cuts and tight apertures remain clear.