Sans Other Eptu 1 is a very bold, very wide, high contrast, italic, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, logotypes, sports, gaming, futuristic, techno, sporty, industrial, aggressive, impact, speed, sci-fi, branding, display, blocky, angular, compressed, slanted, ink-trap.
A heavy, slanted display sans built from blocky, angular forms with squared shoulders and sharply cut terminals. Counters are small and often rectangular, with frequent notch-like cut-ins that read like ink-trap details and add a mechanical rhythm across the alphabet. The overall construction leans forward with a consistent oblique stress, while curves (notably in C, O, S) are rendered as rounded rectangles rather than true circles. Proportions are squat and substantial, with wide bodies, tight interior space, and a firm baseline presence that keeps words looking dense and compact.
Best suited to short, high-impact settings such as headlines, posters, event graphics, game titles, esports/sports branding, and tech-themed UI splash screens. It can also work for bold wordmarks where a compact, forward-driving silhouette is desired, but is less appropriate for long-form reading due to dense color and tight apertures.
The face projects a fast, engineered attitude—part sci‑fi interface, part motorsport branding—thanks to its forward slant, chunky mass, and sharp chamfers. Its notched joins and squared curves give it a stamped, industrial feel that reads confident and assertive.
The design appears intended to deliver a distinctive, high-energy display voice using squared geometry and purposeful cut-ins to keep counters identifiable while maintaining a dense, powerful silhouette. Its consistent forward slant and modular shapes suggest an aim toward contemporary tech and performance aesthetics rather than neutral everyday text.
Letterfit is tight and the small apertures can close up quickly at small sizes, especially in forms like a, e, s, and 8. The distinctive notches and rectangular counters create strong texture in all-caps headlines, while lowercase retains the same geometric, modular logic rather than a text-oriented rhythm.