Sans Faceted Omnu 7 is a regular weight, normal width, monoline, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, logos, game titles, packaging, gothic, medieval, fantasy, angular, stern, thematic display, dramatic tone, brand impact, retro-gothic, beveled, chamfered, blackletter-esque, geometric, crisp.
This typeface is built from straight strokes and sharp, faceted joins, replacing curves with planar angles and chamfered corners. Stems are consistently thick with a largely even stroke presence, producing a bold, graphic silhouette. Many forms feature pointed terminals and small internal counters that read as polygonal cutouts, giving letters an engineered, beveled look. Proportions are moderately tall with compact apertures and a disciplined, rhythmic verticality; round letters like O/Q are rendered as angular octagons, reinforcing the faceted construction across the set.
Best suited for short-form display use such as headlines, posters, title treatments, logos, and packaging where its sharp silhouettes can read large and deliver mood. It can work for themed interfaces or event branding (e.g., fantasy, metal, or gothic-inspired aesthetics), while extended small-size text may feel dense due to the tight apertures and strong angularity.
The overall tone evokes gothic and medieval lettering through its pointed forms and disciplined vertical rhythm, while the crisp faceting adds a modern, hard-edged edge. It feels assertive and ceremonial—well suited to fantasy-leaning or dramatic messaging without ornamental flourishes beyond the angular construction.
The design intention appears to be a clean, constructed display face that channels blackletter-era severity through a contemporary faceted geometry. Its consistent straight-stroke system and pointed terminals suggest an aim for strong branding presence and a distinctive, armor-like texture in words.
Uppercase and lowercase share the same structural logic, with lowercase retaining a distinctly built, angular character rather than becoming more calligraphic. Numerals follow the same faceted geometry, with clear, emblem-like shapes and sharp corners that prioritize impact over softness.