Sans Faceted Vozi 10 is a very bold, wide, low contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, logos, esports, packaging, industrial, futuristic, tactical, arcade, impact, machined feel, tech styling, branding, angular, chamfered, octagonal, blocky, geometric.
A heavy, angular display sans built from flat planes and chamfered corners, with curves largely replaced by faceted cuts. Strokes maintain a consistent thickness and create a compact, mechanical texture, while counters are often polygonal and inset, giving characters a stenciled, cut-metal feel without actual gaps. The geometry favors straight segments, diagonals, and clipped terminals; rounded forms like O/Q become octagonal, and joins tend to form sharp wedges that read clearly at larger sizes. Overall spacing is sturdy and even, producing a dense, high-impact word shape in all caps and a similarly constructed lowercase with simplified, geometric bowls and shoulders.
Best suited to short, prominent settings such as headlines, posters, logotypes, gaming/esports branding, and product packaging where the bold, faceted silhouette can carry impact. It also fits UI-like labels, badges, and scoreboard-style numerals when used at comfortable display sizes.
The font projects a robust, engineered attitude—evoking sci‑fi interfaces, sports hardware, and arcade-era titling. Its faceted construction and hard corners lend an assertive, no-nonsense tone that feels technical and action-oriented rather than friendly or literary.
The design intention appears to be creating a rugged, geometric display face that translates rounded letterforms into planar facets for a distinctive, machined aesthetic. Its consistent stroke weight and clipped terminals aim for strong presence and immediate recognizability in branding and titling contexts.
In continuous text, the strong angular rhythm dominates and individual letters rely on distinctive cut-ins and notches for differentiation, which can feel energetic but busy at small sizes. Numerals follow the same clipped, polygonal logic, matching the alphabet for cohesive titling and UI-style callouts.