Sans Other Komof 7 is a regular weight, normal width, monoline, italic, normal x-height, monospaced font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, branding, gaming, interfaces, techno, industrial, tactical, retro, utilitarian, tech styling, stencil effect, high impact, systemic consistency, angular, chamfered, stencil-cut, segmented, high-contrast joints.
An angular, slanted sans with a rigid, modular construction and frequent chamfered corners. Strokes are consistently uniform in thickness, but many letters are interrupted by small notches and cut-ins that create a segmented, stencil-like rhythm. Curves are minimized into faceted arcs (notably in C, G, O, Q, and S), and terminals tend to end in sharp diagonals or short horizontal flats. The overall texture is compact and mechanical, with distinct internal breaks and tight joins that emphasize a geometric, engineered feel.
Best suited to display applications where its segmented geometry can be a feature: titles, posters, logos/wordmarks, game UI, and tech-themed interface labels. It can also work for short, high-impact captions or alphanumeric-heavy elements such as tags, identifiers, and scoreboard-style readouts.
The tone reads technical and utilitarian, with a subtle sci‑fi/industrial edge. The consistent slant and crisp cutouts suggest motion and precision, evoking instrumentation, machinery markings, or tactical labeling rather than a friendly everyday voice.
The design appears intended to deliver a sharp, engineered voice by combining a consistent slant with faceted outlines and deliberate cutouts, creating a modern stencil/tech aesthetic while maintaining a disciplined, modular rhythm across the alphabet and numerals.
The faceting and internal interruptions add strong character but also introduce busier counters in letters like a, e, s, and g; this gives the face its signature look and can make long passages feel more patterned than smooth. Numerals follow the same cut-corner geometry, keeping the set visually cohesive for codes and data-like strings.