Sans Faceted Lymo 5 is a regular weight, wide, monoline, upright, normal x-height font visually similar to 'Black Square' by Agny Hasya Studio, 'Lustra Text' by Grype, 'Neusa Neu' by Inhouse Type, 'Cobe' by Stawix, and 'Myers Sans' by T-26 (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: display, headlines, branding, posters, packaging, techno, industrial, futuristic, utilitarian, arcade, geometric styling, technical tone, strong silhouettes, interface feel, chamfered, angular, octagonal, geometric, stencil-like.
A faceted geometric sans with crisp chamfered corners that turn curves into short planar segments. Strokes are even and mechanically consistent, creating a clean monoline texture with strong, blocky silhouettes. Counters tend toward octagonal forms (notably in O, 0, 8, 9), and terminals are cut flat or beveled rather than rounded. Proportions read slightly expanded with generous internal space, while overall spacing and rhythm stay steady across caps, lowercase, and figures.
Best suited for headlines, logos, posters, and packaging where the angular geometry can be a defining visual motif. It also fits UI titles, game/tech graphics, and short bursts of text that benefit from a crisp, hardware-like feel.
The sharp, cut-corner construction gives a technical, engineered tone—more machine-made than humanist. Its polygonal bowls and squared-off details evoke sci‑fi interfaces, industrial labeling, and retro arcade aesthetics, projecting precision and toughness over softness.
Likely designed to translate rounded sans structures into a consistent chamfered geometry, maximizing a strong, modular look while keeping familiar sans proportions. The intention reads as a contemporary techno display face that stays legible through uniform stroke weight and clear counter shapes.
The lowercase maintains the same faceted logic as the capitals, keeping a unified voice in mixed-case text. Numerals mirror the letterforms with similar octagonal counters and strong diagonals, supporting a cohesive alphanumeric system.