Sans Other Jiso 5 is a regular weight, wide, monoline, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: ui labels, game titles, tech branding, posters, signage, techno, futuristic, digital, industrial, arcade, digital display, sci‑fi tone, modular system, retro gaming, square, angular, geometric, modular, sharp-cornered.
A geometric, square-built sans with monoline strokes and a strongly rectilinear skeleton. Corners are predominantly hard and right-angled, with frequent clipped/mitred terminals that create small diagonal cuts at joins and stroke ends. Counters tend toward rectangular forms (notably in O, D, P, and a), and horizontals/verticals dominate while diagonals appear sparingly and with crisp, engineered angles (V/W/X/Y). The overall rhythm is clean and mechanical, with consistent stroke thickness and a modular, grid-like construction that stays legible at display sizes.
Well-suited to interface headers, HUD/readout styling, tech and gaming identities, and short display copy where its angular geometry can be a feature. It also works for signage and packaging callouts that benefit from a crisp, engineered look, but the rigid construction may feel busy in long paragraphs at small sizes.
The font conveys a retro-digital, sci‑fi tone—precise, machine-made, and slightly game-like. Its squared counters and chamfered details read as technical and utilitarian, evoking interface typography, arcade aesthetics, and industrial labeling rather than editorial warmth.
The design appears intended to deliver a modular, futuristic sans that feels at home in digital environments. By favoring square counters, consistent stroke weight, and chamfered terminals, it aims for a precision-engineered voice that stays recognizable and stylistically coherent across caps, lowercase, and numerals.
Distinctive chamfering and open, squared apertures give many glyphs a cut-metal or stencil-adjacent feel without true breaks in the strokes. Numerals are similarly boxy and angular, matching the caps’ geometry for cohesive titling and readouts.