Sans Faceted Gupa 6 is a very light, normal width, low contrast, italic, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, branding, ui labels, tech packaging, technical, futuristic, angular, precise, minimal, geometric styling, sci-fi tone, technical labeling, display impact, faceted, octagonal, monoline, geometric, sharp-cornered.
A monoline, slanted sans with faceted construction: curves are replaced by short straight segments that create octagonal and chamfered outlines. Strokes stay consistently thin with clean joins and no terminals suggesting serifs, producing an airy texture and quick rhythm in text. Proportions feel geometric and slightly condensed in round forms, while many letters use simplified, open shapes and straight-sided counters that emphasize the planar, cut-corner look.
Best suited to display applications where the faceted detailing can be appreciated—headlines, posters, logotypes, product branding, and tech or gaming packaging. It can also work for short UI labels or interface headings when a sleek, geometric voice is desired, while longer body text may feel light and busy due to the thin strokes and segmented curves.
The faceted geometry and forward slant give the face a technical, futuristic tone, like labeling on instruments or schematic typography. Its thin strokes and sharp corners read as precise and engineered, with a slightly edgy, sci‑fi sensibility rather than warm or humanist softness.
The design appears intended to translate a geometric, polygonal construction into a clean sans, trading smooth curves for planar facets to evoke precision and a modern, engineered aesthetic. The consistent thin stroke and systematic chamfers suggest an emphasis on visual coherence across letters and numbers, making the faceting feel like a deliberate structural rule rather than decoration.
Numerals and rounded letters (such as 0, 8, O, Q) strongly showcase the polygonal modeling, which becomes the defining visual signature across the set. Diagonals are prominent (K, V, W, X, Y), and the overall spacing feels open, helping the angular forms stay legible at display sizes.