Sans Faceted Buze 5 is a very bold, normal width, low contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: posters, headlines, logos, game ui, packaging, industrial, tough, retro, arcade, assertive, impact, geometric styling, retro display, tech tone, branding, angular, chamfered, blocky, geometric, compact.
A heavy, all-caps–friendly display sans built from blunt, faceted strokes. Corners are consistently chamfered, turning curves into planar cuts and giving rounds like O/Q/C a squarish, octagonal footprint. Counters are small and tightly controlled, with squared interior cutouts and occasional triangular notches; terminals end in flat planes rather than softened joins. The overall construction is compact and upright, with short extenders in the lowercase and a mostly uniform, monoline feel that keeps texture dense in words and lines.
Best suited to headlines, titles, wordmarks, and branding where a bold, geometric presence is needed. It also fits game and tech UI labels, event posters, and packaging that benefit from an industrial or retro-futurist tone. For longer passages, larger sizes and generous spacing help maintain clarity.
The faceted geometry reads as mechanical and hard-edged, suggesting stamped metal, arcade cabinets, or sci‑fi interfaces. Its dense, black silhouettes project strength and urgency, with a playful retro edge that can feel game-like or poster-driven depending on color and setting.
The design appears intended to translate a sturdy, sans skeleton into a planar, chamfered system that replaces curves with crisp facets. The goal is maximum impact and a distinctive, engineered voice while keeping letterforms broadly familiar and readable in display contexts.
In running text the rhythm becomes highly graphic: diagonals and clipped corners create a repeating zig-zag cadence, while the small apertures and counters can close up quickly at smaller sizes. Numerals match the same angular, cut-corner logic, keeping headlines and short numeric callouts visually consistent.