Sans Faceted Lagi 3 is a light, very wide, medium contrast, upright, tall x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, branding, ui labels, packaging, futuristic, technical, sci‑fi, digital, industrial, tech aesthetic, geometric display, interface voice, mechanical precision, angular, faceted, octagonal, chamfered, monolinear-ish.
A sharply faceted sans with octagonal, chamfered joins replacing curves throughout. Strokes are built from straight segments with consistent thickness, producing a crisp, planar rhythm; horizontals and verticals dominate, with diagonals used sparingly and cut at hard angles. Counters tend toward squared or clipped-rectangle shapes, and terminals often finish in small angled cuts that read like mechanical joints. The proportions feel expanded and open, with a tall x-height and compact ascenders/descenders; overall spacing is moderate, keeping the texture airy while maintaining strong geometric presence.
Best suited for display settings where its angular construction can be appreciated—headlines, posters, logos, and short-form branding. It also fits interface labels, product markings, and tech-themed packaging where a geometric, engineered voice is desired; for dense body copy it will be more effective at larger sizes due to the constant faceting texture.
The faceted geometry and clipped corners give the font a futuristic, engineered tone associated with digital interfaces, hardware labeling, and sci‑fi worldbuilding. It reads as precise and controlled rather than humanist, with a cool, utilitarian character that suggests machinery and tech aesthetics.
The design appears intended to translate a geometric sans into a cut-metal, polygonal language, preserving familiar letter structures while swapping curves for crisp facets. Its goal seems to be a contemporary, tech-forward look that remains readable and consistent across uppercase, lowercase, and numerals.
In longer text, the repeated chamfers create a distinctive zig-zag sparkle along curves and diagonals, which becomes a primary identifying feature. Round letters like O/C/G and numerals adopt the same polygonal construction, helping the set feel visually unified while staying legible at display sizes.