Sans Other Jiga 6 is a regular weight, normal width, low contrast, upright, short x-height font.
Keywords: gaming ui, sci-fi ui, posters, headlines, logos, techno, futuristic, industrial, arcade, mechanical, digital feel, modular system, high impact, distinct silhouettes, square, angular, modular, geometric, monoline.
A sharply modular sans built from straight strokes and hard right angles, with occasional 45° cuts and notched joins. Curves are largely avoided in favor of squared bowls and rectangular counters, giving letters like O, D, and Q an enclosed, boxy construction. Strokes are consistently monoline with crisp terminals, and diagonals (as in K, M, N, V, W, X, Y) are rendered as clean, segmented vectors rather than smooth joins. The lowercase follows the same engineered logic, with simplified, geometric forms and compact counters that create a tight, pixel-adjacent rhythm in text.
Best suited to display applications where a technological or retro-digital flavor is desired, such as game titles, sci‑fi interface mockups, event posters, branding marks, and packaging callouts. It can work for short text settings when the goal is a deliberately mechanical texture rather than conventional readability.
The overall tone reads digital and utilitarian—evoking sci‑fi interfaces, arcade graphics, and industrial labeling. Its rigid geometry and clipped corners lend an assertive, technical voice that feels synthetic rather than humanist.
The letterforms appear designed to translate a grid-based, engineered aesthetic into a clean sans, prioritizing angular construction, uniform stroke logic, and high-impact silhouettes. The consistent modular detailing suggests an intention to feel systemized and machine-built, while remaining legible in headline sizes.
The design emphasizes distinct silhouettes through asymmetric cuts (notably on terminals and inner corners) and squared apertures, which helps maintain separation in all-caps and mixed-case settings. Numerals match the same rectilinear system, producing a consistent, display-oriented texture across alphanumerics.