Sans Faceted Urto 6 is a very bold, very wide, low contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, logos, posters, gaming ui, sports branding, industrial, techno, futuristic, tactical, arcade, sci-fi styling, impact display, mechanical feel, interface tone, angular, faceted, chamfered, blocky, stencil-like.
This typeface is built from heavy, squared forms that replace curves with crisp planar facets and chamfered corners. Counters are mostly rectangular and tightly controlled, with distinctive wedge-like cuts at joins and terminals that create a machined, modular look. Stroke endings tend to be flat and horizontal/vertical, while diagonals (as in A, K, V, W, X, Y) are rendered as bold, geometric planes that keep the rhythm consistent. The overall spacing feels sturdy and headline-forward, with simplified interior shapes and minimal detailing for strong silhouette clarity.
Best suited for short-to-medium display settings where impact and a technical aesthetic are desired—such as titles, brand marks, packaging callouts, esports/team identities, and interface headers. It can also work for signage-style labeling and number-heavy elements (scores, model numbers, HUD readouts) where a rigid, machined tone supports the content.
The faceted construction and cut-corner geometry project a utilitarian, engineered tone—evoking sci‑fi interfaces, industrial labeling, and game UI aesthetics. Its hard angles and dense presence read as assertive and action-oriented rather than friendly or editorial.
The design appears intended to translate a futuristic, fabricated surface language into letterforms—favoring planar cuts, squared counters, and simplified geometry to create a bold, industrial voice that stays coherent across uppercase, lowercase, and numerals.
Uppercase characters are especially emblematic, with octagonal and rectangular outlines (notably O and Q) and a squared, boxed feel across rounds. Lowercase follows the same geometric system with compact bowls and straight-sided stems, keeping the voice consistent between cases. Numerals are similarly constructed, with strong horizontal bars and angular transitions that maintain a uniform, mechanical texture in strings of digits.