Sans Faceted Abbus 12 is a very bold, normal width, monoline, upright, normal x-height font visually similar to 'Monorama' by Indian Type Foundry (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: logos, posters, headlines, sports, gaming, industrial, techno, arcade, athletic, aggressive, impact, futurism, ruggedness, branding, signage, angular, geometric, octagonal, chamfered, blocky.
A heavy, geometric sans built from straight strokes and clipped corners, replacing curves with crisp chamfers and faceted joins. Counters are mostly rectangular or octagonal, giving letters a tight, engineered feel with small apertures and strong interior negative space. Strokes maintain consistent thickness, while terminals favor flat cuts and diagonal truncations that create a rhythmic, mechanical texture across words. Figures and capitals share the same hard-edged construction, with squared bowls and sharp notches that keep the overall silhouette compact and punchy.
Best suited to display roles such as logos, headlines, posters, packaging, and signage where strong silhouettes and angular character can read quickly. It also fits esports/team branding, gaming UI accents, tech-themed graphics, and titling where a hard, geometric voice reinforces the message.
The faceted construction reads as technical and assertive, evoking machinery, futuristic interfaces, and game-era display lettering. Its sharp angles and dense black mass lend a competitive, high-impact tone that feels confident and slightly confrontational, suited to bold statements rather than subtlety.
The design appears intended to translate a modern, machine-cut aesthetic into a compact, high-impact alphabet, using consistent chamfers to unify forms and avoid round geometry. It prioritizes bold presence and a distinctive faceted texture for branding and attention-grabbing display typography.
The design’s repeated chamfer motif creates strong stylistic cohesion, especially in round-adjacent shapes like C, G, O, and S which become polygonal. In longer text, the tight apertures and heavy weight emphasize pattern over individual letter detail, making it most effective where punch and character matter more than quiet readability at small sizes.