Sans Other Nyhi 11 is a very bold, normal width, monoline, upright, normal x-height font visually similar to 'Stallman' by Par Défaut (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: headlines, posters, logos, game ui, packaging, techno, industrial, arcade, futuristic, brutalist, impact, modularity, sci-fi tone, signage, geometric, angular, squared, stencil-like, modular.
A heavy, modular sans built from squared forms and hard angles, with consistent stroke weight and a strong preference for 90° corners and clipped diagonals. Counters are tight and often rectangular, and many joins are notched or chamfered, creating a cut-out, stencil-like construction. The overall rhythm is compact and blocky, with wide capitals and short-looking horizontal apertures that emphasize a dense, pixel-adjacent texture in words and lines of text.
Best suited to headlines and short bursts of copy where its angular cut-ins and block geometry can be appreciated. It also fits logos, game/interface graphics, product labeling, and high-contrast packaging where a compact, technical voice is desired.
The face reads as mechanical and high-impact, evoking arcade interfaces, sci‑fi labeling, and industrial signage. Its chiseled corners and boxed counters give it a purposeful, engineered tone that feels assertive and utilitarian rather than friendly or literary.
The design appears intended to translate a rigid, grid-based aesthetic into a bold sans for display use, using chamfers and internal notches to suggest machining, stenciling, or digital modularity while keeping letterforms highly uniform and impactful.
At text sizes the small, squared apertures and frequent interior cut-ins can darken the word image, while at larger sizes those notches and chamfers become a distinctive graphic signature. The numerals and lowercase follow the same rectilinear logic, reinforcing a cohesive, display-oriented system.