Hollow Other Wode 2 is a bold, very wide, very high contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, logotypes, gaming, sci‑fi ui, tech, futuristic, industrial, arcade, mechanical, display impact, tech flavor, modular construction, stencil effect, retro digital, geometric, square, boxy, stencil-like, inline.
A boxy, geometric display face built from squared forms and long horizontal runs, with abrupt corners and occasional rounded outer corners. Strokes are heavy and strongly contrasted by internal knockouts: many glyphs contain inset rectangular counters, slots, and thin inline gaps that create a hollowed, modular construction. The drawing favors straight segments and right angles, with simplified bowls and open apertures; diagonals are used sparingly and read as sharp, engineered slashes. Spacing and widths vary noticeably across the set, reinforcing a constructed, grid-logic rhythm rather than a traditional text cadence.
Best suited for large-scale display typography such as posters, titles, branding wordmarks, game graphics, and science‑fiction or tech-themed interfaces. It can also work for packaging accents or signage where a futuristic, engineered voice is desired, but it is less appropriate for extended text due to the dense forms and internal detailing.
The overall tone feels technological and machine-made, with a retro-digital edge reminiscent of arcade, sci‑fi UI, and industrial labeling. The cutout detailing adds a schematic, hardware-like character—precise, slightly aggressive, and graphic—suited to bold, attention-driven communication.
The design appears intended to deliver a futuristic, modular aesthetic by carving linear and rectangular voids into chunky letterforms, creating a high-impact silhouette with a distinctive hollowed, technical texture. Its wide stance and squared geometry prioritize graphic presence and stylized readability over traditional typographic neutrality.
At smaller sizes the interior cutouts and thin inline separations are likely to merge visually, so the design reads best when given room to breathe. The numerals and uppercase shapes emphasize rectangular massing and horizontal momentum, producing a strong headline silhouette with a distinctive “constructed from parts” look.