Sans Faceted Tifu 3 is a regular weight, very wide, low contrast, upright, tall x-height font.
Keywords: ui labels, tech branding, headlines, signage, packaging, futuristic, technical, industrial, modular, sci‑fi, tech aesthetic, display clarity, geometric styling, interface tone, octagonal, chamfered, geometric, angular, square counters.
This typeface is built from squared, faceted strokes with consistent thickness and crisp chamfered corners that replace most curves with planar segments. Forms tend toward octagonal and rectangular outlines, with boxy counters in letters like O and D and squared bowls throughout. The design is notably extended horizontally, producing wide capitals and roomy, rectilinear lowercase with a tall x-height. Terminals are blunt and clean, spacing is even and mechanical, and the overall rhythm is driven by straight strokes, right angles, and small bevel cuts rather than continuous curvature.
Best suited to display sizes where its chamfered geometry and wide stance can read clearly—such as UI/UX headings, product and tech branding, posters, and industrial-style signage. It can also work for short blocks of text in interfaces or on packaging when a crisp, engineered personality is desired.
The face projects a futuristic, engineered tone—clean, precise, and slightly retro-digital. Its angular construction and squared counters read as technical and utilitarian, evoking interfaces, machinery labeling, and sci‑fi display typography while staying orderly and controlled.
The design appears intended to deliver a contemporary techno-sans voice by translating conventional sans-serif skeletons into faceted, hard-edged geometry. Its wide proportions, squared counters, and consistent chamfers prioritize a constructed, machine-made feel over humanist warmth or calligraphic nuance.
Distinctive facets appear at joins and corners (for example in C, G, S, and 2), giving the font a consistent ‘chiseled’ edge. Several glyphs lean into geometric simplification (notably the box-like O/0 and the angular diagonals in V/W/X/Y), reinforcing a modular, constructed aesthetic.