Sans Other Ifsi 5 is a bold, normal width, monoline, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: display, headlines, posters, logos, game ui, futuristic, techno, industrial, gaming, sci-fi, sci-fi feel, tech branding, stencil effect, display impact, modular system, rounded corners, stencil cuts, modular, geometric, squared.
A heavy, geometric sans with squared proportions and generously rounded corners. Strokes are consistently thick and monoline-like, with frequent horizontal cut-ins and notches that create a stencil-like, segmented construction across many letters. Curves are simplified into broad arcs and chamfered turns, while counters tend to be compact and squarish, giving the design a dense, blocky rhythm. Uppercase forms read wide and stable, and the lowercase echoes the same modular logic with simplified bowls and terminals; numerals follow suit with blunt, cut-away shapes and strong horizontal emphasis.
Best suited for display typography where its segmented detailing can be appreciated: headlines, posters, cover art, branding marks, esports/gaming graphics, and tech-themed UI titles or labels. It can also work for short feature text or signage-style phrases, but the internal cuts may reduce clarity in long passages or small point sizes.
The overall tone feels futuristic and engineered, with a distinctly techno/industrial flavor. The repeated breaks and squared geometry suggest interfaces, machinery labeling, and retro sci‑fi aesthetics, lending the font a confident, assertive presence.
The design appears intended to deliver a strong, contemporary sci‑fi voice by combining a bold geometric skeleton with stencil-like breaks that add motion and a manufactured feel. The consistent, modular treatment across caps, lowercase, and numerals suggests an emphasis on cohesive identity for tech-forward branding and on-screen typography.
The recurring horizontal interruptions become a defining texture in continuous text, creating a patterned, banded look that is highly distinctive but visually busy at small sizes. Round letters (like O/C/G) are rendered as squared-rounded forms, reinforcing the mechanical, modular theme.