Sans Faceted Lapi 2 is a bold, normal width, monoline, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, logos, posters, packaging, signage, techy, industrial, retro, futuristic, arcade, geometric display, tech branding, industrial clarity, retro computing, octagonal, chamfered, angular, geometric, modular.
A geometric, monoline sans built from straight segments and pronounced chamfered corners, creating an octagonal, faceted silhouette in place of smooth curves. Strokes are consistently heavy with squared terminals, and counters tend toward rectangular or clipped-rect shapes, giving letters like O, D, and 0 a distinctive cut-corner frame. Proportions are compact with tight apertures and a steady, mechanical rhythm; diagonals (K, V, W, Y) follow the same segmented logic, keeping the design visually uniform across the set. Figures and capitals read like engraved blocks, while the lowercase maintains the same angular construction for a coherent mixed-case texture.
Best suited to display typography where its chamfered geometry can be appreciated—headlines, branding marks, product packaging, labels, and bold UI moments for tech or game-themed projects. It also works well for signage-style applications where a sturdy, industrial tone is desired, and for numeric-centric designs that benefit from the distinctive, framed figures.
The overall tone feels engineered and digital—clean, assertive, and slightly retro, reminiscent of industrial labeling and early computer or arcade aesthetics. Its faceted geometry conveys precision and toughness more than warmth, leaning toward a utilitarian, sci‑fi mood.
The font appears designed to translate a faceted, machined geometry into a consistent sans alphabet, prioritizing a strong silhouette and uniform construction over calligraphic nuance. Its goal seems to be delivering a confident, futuristic-industrial voice that remains coherent across caps, lowercase, and numerals.
The design’s clipped corners and internal angles create strong pixel-like cues without being a true pixel grid, which helps it stay crisp at display sizes. The heavy stroke and tight interior shapes can make dense text feel compact, so spacing and size choice will strongly influence readability.