Sans Other Jiru 5 is a regular weight, wide, monoline, upright, normal x-height font visually similar to 'Exabyte' by Pepper Type (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: headlines, posters, logos, gaming, ui titles, techno, sci‑fi, futuristic, digital, industrial, futurism, interface style, tech branding, modular system, geometric, angular, chamfered, modular, square.
A geometric, modular sans built from uniform stroke widths and predominantly straight segments. Curves are minimized and often resolved as chamfered corners or angled joints, producing a squared, circuit-like silhouette throughout. Counters tend to be boxy and open, with generous interior space and crisp right angles; terminals are typically blunt or diagonally cut, giving the design a faceted rhythm. Overall spacing reads airy and screen-friendly, while widths vary by character, keeping the texture from feeling fully monospaced.
Best suited for display settings where its geometric personality can read clearly: headlines, posters, game titles, tech branding, and interface-style titling. It also works well for short labels, navigation elements, and numeric callouts where a crisp, engineered look is desired.
The tone is distinctly futuristic and technical, evoking digital interfaces, industrial labeling, and sci‑fi world-building. Its angular construction and cut corners suggest precision and engineered functionality rather than warmth or tradition.
The design appears intended to deliver a clean, futuristic sans with a modular, grid-based construction and distinctive chamfered details. It prioritizes a technological aesthetic and strong silhouette recognition over traditional humanist flow.
Uppercase forms lean especially rectangular (e.g., C/G-like shapes with squared openings), and diagonals appear selectively where needed (such as in K, M, N, X), reinforcing a constructed, modular logic. The figures share the same hard-edged geometry, supporting consistent display use in headings and UI-style numerics.