Sans Other Daris 2 is a bold, normal width, medium contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: logotypes, headlines, posters, game ui, tech branding, techno, arcade, industrial, futuristic, robotic, digital feel, modular system, sci-fi tone, display impact, geometric, blocky, angular, square, stencil-like.
A blocky, geometric sans built from straight strokes and squared-off corners, with minimal curvature and a pixel-adjacent, grid-based construction. Counters are often rectangular and sometimes partially cut, producing a stencil-like feel in letters such as A, B, P, and R. Terminals are flat and orthogonal, and diagonals appear sparingly but decisively in forms like K, V, W, X, and the slashed zero. The lowercase echoes the uppercase architecture with simplified, angular bowls and open apertures, while numerals follow the same modular logic for strong visual consistency.
Best suited for display applications where its modular, high-impact shapes can carry character—logos, titles, packaging accents, esports or arcade-themed graphics, and UI labels in games or tech products. It can also work for short captions or signage when set with generous size and spacing to keep counters from closing up.
The overall tone reads digital and engineered, evoking arcade interfaces, sci-fi labeling, and utilitarian machine typography. Its rigid geometry and cut-in notches add a slightly aggressive, mechanical energy that feels retro-futuristic rather than friendly or humanist.
The font appears designed to deliver a strongly geometric, digital-industrial voice using a constrained, grid-like construction and stencil-style interruptions, prioritizing iconic shapes and a technological atmosphere over conventional text smoothness.
The design’s internal cutouts and stepped joins create distinctive silhouettes that remain recognizable at display sizes, but the tight counters and squared joins suggest it will feel denser in small text. The rhythm is intentionally mechanical, with frequent right angles and repeated structural motifs across caps, lowercase, and figures.