Sans Other Orhu 5 is a very bold, wide, monoline, upright, normal x-height font visually similar to 'Draina', 'Eraone', and 'Quareg' by Umka Type (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: headlines, posters, logos, packaging, game ui, retro, tech, arcade, industrial, robotic, digital feel, sci-fi branding, impact display, grid construction, square, angular, blocky, modular, stencil-like.
A heavy, modular sans with square proportions, uniform stroke weight, and sharply chamfered corners throughout. Forms are built from straight segments and right angles, with occasional 45° cuts that create a mechanical, faceted silhouette. Counters tend to be rectangular and compact, apertures are narrow, and joins stay crisp with minimal curvature, producing dense, high-contrast word shapes at display sizes. The lowercase follows the same geometric construction as the caps, with simplified, rectilinear bowls and tight interior spaces.
Best suited for display applications such as headlines, posters, logo wordmarks, game or sci‑fi UI treatments, and bold packaging callouts where its blocky construction can stay clear. It can also work for short labels or section headers, but extended text benefits from larger sizes and generous line spacing to maintain legibility.
The overall tone is assertive and machine-made, with a distinctly retro-digital feel. Its rigid geometry and cut corners evoke arcade graphics, sci‑fi interfaces, and industrial labeling, giving text a confident, utilitarian punch.
The design appears intended to translate a grid-based, pixel-adjacent aesthetic into clean vector forms—retaining the chunky, modular rhythm of digital lettering while adding precise chamfers and consistent stroke logic for strong branding impact.
Spacing appears visually tight due to the massy letterforms and small counters, so the face reads best when given adequate size and breathing room. The faceted terminals and consistent modular logic make it especially distinctive in all-caps settings and short phrases.