Sans Faceted Kowe 5 is a regular weight, wide, monoline, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, logos, game ui, title screens, futuristic, tech, industrial, arcade, tactical, futurism, interface look, mechanical precision, geometric systematization, angular, chamfered, geometric, octagonal, squared.
A geometric display sans built from straight strokes and crisp chamfered corners, replacing curves with planar facets. Stems and horizontals stay consistently even, while counters and bowls resolve into octagonal or squared forms. The overall construction emphasizes sharp terminals, clipped joins, and a modular rhythm; diagonals are used decisively in letters like K, M, N, V, W, X, and Y, and round characters like O, C, G, and S read as faceted polygons rather than arcs. Spacing feels open and the shapes read cleanly at headline sizes, with a slightly mechanical, engineered regularity across caps, lowercase, and numerals.
Best suited to short-form display work where the faceted geometry can read clearly: tech branding, sci‑fi and gaming titles, interface-style graphics, posters, packaging accents, and signage-inspired compositions. It can also work for UI labels or overlays when set with ample size and spacing.
The tone is distinctly sci‑fi and technical, evoking interfaces, hardware markings, and angular cyber aesthetics. Its sharp geometry and clipped corners lend an assertive, tactical feel that also nods to retro arcade and industrial labeling.
The design appears intended to translate a modernist sans skeleton into an angular, planar system that signals technology and precision. By systematically chamfering corners and faceting curves, it delivers a consistent, engineered voice for futuristic and industrial-forward typography.
Distinctive features include polygonal round forms, squared-off apertures, and crisp notches/cuts that create a consistent faceted motif throughout. Numerals and capitals share the same hard-edged logic, helping mixed-case settings feel cohesive and intentionally “constructed.”