Sans Faceted Furu 5 is a regular weight, narrow, low contrast, italic, normal x-height font visually similar to 'Refuel' by Typodermic (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: sports branding, racing graphics, headlines, posters, app ui, sporty, aggressive, technical, futuristic, industrial, speed, impact, precision, modernity, consistency, angular, faceted, slanted, condensed, compact.
This typeface is built from sharp, planar strokes that replace most curves with clipped corners and chamfered joins, creating a distinctly faceted silhouette. The slanted construction and compact proportions give it a fast, forward-leaning rhythm, while the strokes remain largely monoline for a clean, controlled texture. Counters are tight and geometric, with octagonal/hexagonal tendencies in rounded forms (notably in O/0 and similar shapes), and terminals frequently end in angled cuts that reinforce the engineered feel. Overall spacing reads compact and efficient, producing a dense, punchy line in text settings.
Best suited for energetic headlines, athletic or racing identities, event graphics, and bold product branding where an angular, high-impact tone is desired. It can also work for interface accents, labels, and short callouts that benefit from a compact, technical look, rather than extended body text.
The design projects speed and impact, blending a sporty, performance-minded attitude with a technical, machined edge. Its crisp facets and hard angles evoke motorsport branding, sci‑fi interfaces, and industrial labeling, where sharp geometry communicates precision and intensity.
The letterforms appear designed to translate aerodynamic speed and mechanical precision into a cohesive, faceted sans system. By using chamfers and angled terminals throughout, it aims to stay highly consistent and modern while delivering a distinctive, display-forward personality.
Uppercase forms feel more rigid and display-driven, while the lowercase maintains the same chiseled logic for consistent voice across longer samples. Numerals follow the same cut-corner geometry, keeping signage-like clarity and a cohesive, instrument-panel character.