Sans Faceted Ompu 5 is a light, normal width, monoline, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, logotypes, posters, ui labels, game titles, futuristic, techno, cyberpunk, runic, mechanical, sci‑fi styling, geometric rigor, interface clarity, distinctive display, angular, faceted, geometric, polygonal, chiseled.
A sharply angular, geometric sans built from straight strokes and faceted corners, with curves consistently replaced by planar chamfers. Strokes keep an even thickness and terminate in clean, hard ends, producing crisp silhouettes and a slightly stenciled, engineered feel without true breaks. Letterforms favor hexagon-like bowls and pointed vertices (notably in O/Q/0 and rounded letters), with narrow internal counters and a compact, rhythmic texture in text. Ascenders and descenders are straightforward and vertical, and the overall spacing reads steady, with slightly tight apertures in letters like C, G, and S.
Best suited for display applications where the angular facets can be appreciated: titles, posters, brand marks, packaging, and tech or game-themed interface labels. It can work for short passages or taglines, but the tight apertures and dense rhythm may reduce comfort for extended reading at small sizes.
The faceted construction gives the font a futuristic, digital-industrial tone—suggestive of sci‑fi interfaces, techno branding, and game-world signage. Its sharp geometry also evokes carved or runic lettering, adding a hint of arcane or retro-computing character while remaining clean and systematic.
The design appears intended to translate a purely geometric, faceted construction into a full alphanumeric set, emphasizing consistency of angles and chamfers over traditional curves. The goal seems to be a contemporary, high-tech voice that still feels crafted and symbol-like through its polygonal bowls and pointed joins.
Numerals follow the same polygonal logic, with a clearly distinguished 0 and an 8 formed from stacked angular bowls. The lowercase maintains the same geometry rather than becoming more calligraphic, reinforcing a consistent, engineered voice across caps, lowercase, and figures.