Sans Faceted Doho 5 is a very bold, normal width, high contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, logos, gaming, sports branding, industrial, futuristic, mechanical, assertive, utilitarian, impact, precision, modernization, branding, display, angular, chamfered, monolinear, condensed feel, geometric.
A heavy, all-caps-forward display face built from straight strokes and crisp chamfered corners, replacing curves with planar facets. Stems are mostly uniform in thickness, with sharp diagonal cuts and occasional notched joins that create a segmented, engineered look. Counters are narrow and often polygonal, and terminals frequently end in angled wedges rather than flat cuts, producing a tight, high-impact silhouette. Lowercase follows the same angular construction and reads like a compact companion to the uppercase, while numerals keep the same beveled, cut-metal geometry.
Best suited to headlines, posters, titles, and brand marks where its faceted construction can be read clearly and contribute character. It also fits tech, sci‑fi, industrial, and gaming contexts, as well as sports or event branding that benefits from a hard-edged, forceful tone. Use with generous size and spacing when longer text is required to keep counters from clogging.
The overall tone feels industrial and futuristic, like lettering cut from steel plate or machined for instrumentation. Its sharp facets and hard angles convey toughness and precision, leaning more tactical than friendly. The rhythm is insistent and attention-grabbing, with a built-in sense of motion from the repeated diagonal cuts.
The design intention appears to be a modern, hard-edged display sans that translates blackletter-like angularity into a cleaner, geometric system. By using chamfers, wedges, and straight segments in place of curves, it aims for a machined, high-impact aesthetic that stays consistent across cases and figures.
In text settings the dense interiors and narrow apertures can visually close up as size decreases, while the faceted terminals help preserve a distinctive texture at larger sizes. The angular punctuation and diamond-like dots reinforce the geometric system and keep the voice consistent across lines.