Sans Faceted Ompi 2 is a regular weight, wide, monoline, upright, tall x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, logos, posters, ui labels, game ui, futuristic, tech, geometric, industrial, game-like, sci‑fi aesthetic, geometric construction, display impact, tech branding, angular, faceted, beveled, polygonal, monolinear.
A sharply faceted, geometric sans built from straight strokes and clipped corners in place of curves. The forms are monoline and open, with frequent chamfered terminals and angled joins that create a consistent polygonal rhythm across caps and lowercase. Counters tend toward hexagonal or octagonal shapes (notably in O, D, and e), and diagonals are used sparingly but decisively, giving letters a constructed, modular feel. The lowercase shows a tall x-height with compact ascenders and minimal curvature, while figures and capitals maintain clear, blocky silhouettes that remain readable at display sizes.
Best suited to display applications where its angular construction can read as a stylistic feature—headlines, branding marks, posters, packaging accents, and sci‑fi or tech-themed UI labeling. It can work for short passages in larger sizes when a crisp, geometric texture is desired, but its hard angles and faceted counters are most effective in titles and callouts.
The overall tone is futuristic and engineered, evoking circuitry, sci‑fi interfaces, and hard-surface industrial design. Its crisp facets and uniform stroke behavior feel assertive and synthetic rather than warm or calligraphic, lending a distinctly digital, game-forward character.
Designed to translate a sans-serif skeleton into a planar, cut-metal geometry, prioritizing distinctive silhouettes and a cohesive faceted motif. The intent appears to be a clean, modern display face that signals technology and futurism while remaining legible through simple stroke structure and generous x-height.
Round letters are intentionally polygonal, producing strong internal angles and a slightly stencil-like impression without true breaks. Spacing and width vary by glyph, but the consistent chamfering and straight-line construction keeps the texture cohesive across mixed-case text and numerals.