Sans Faceted Jive 14 is a regular weight, very wide, monoline, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: display, headlines, logotypes, posters, ui titles, tech, futuristic, industrial, arcade, sci‑fi, geometric styling, tech branding, digital aesthetic, systematic construction, angular, chamfered, geometric, modular, stencil‑like.
A geometric sans built from straight strokes and sharp chamfered corners, replacing curves with faceted planes. Strokes stay even throughout, with squared terminals and consistent join behavior that gives letters a crisp, engineered silhouette. Counters are angular and often octagonal in feel (notably in O/Q/0), and diagonal cuts appear repeatedly in places where a rounded transition would normally occur. The texture is open and airy due to generous widths and simplified, grid-like construction, while keeping clear differentiation between similar shapes.
Best suited to display applications where its angular detailing can read clearly: tech and gaming headlines, sci‑fi or industrial posters, product marks, and interface titles or navigation labels. It can also work for short blocks of text when set with comfortable spacing, but its distinctive faceting is most effective in larger, attention-grabbing roles.
The overall tone is technical and futuristic, with a distinctly digital/arcade flavor. Its faceted geometry reads as machine-cut and utilitarian, suggesting hardware, interfaces, and sci‑fi branding rather than organic or traditional editorial voices.
The font appears designed to translate a mechanical, polygonal construction into a clean sans framework, delivering a bold, contemporary voice without relying on curves. Its consistent chamfers and modular geometry suggest an intention to feel precise, digital, and brandable across both lettering and numbers.
The design language is highly consistent across caps, lowercase, and numerals, with repeated corner chamfers creating a cohesive rhythm. Numerals share the same polygonal logic (octagonal 0, angular 2/5/6/9), supporting a unified voice in alphanumeric-heavy settings. At smaller sizes, the many angled cuts can create a busier sparkle, while at display sizes the planar detailing becomes a defining feature.