Sans Faceted Orsy 4 is a regular weight, normal width, low contrast, upright, normal x-height, monospaced font.
Keywords: ui labels, terminal, coding, data tables, signage, technical, industrial, retro, utilitarian, mechanical, systematic, futuristic, functional, modular, display accent, faceted, chamfered, octagonal, angular, geometric.
A monospaced, geometric sans with an angular construction that replaces curves with straight segments and chamfered corners. Strokes are uniform and clean, with consistent terminals and a deliberate, plotted feel; rounded forms like O/C/G are rendered as octagonal outlines, and diagonals are crisp and evenly weighted. Spacing is fixed-width and steady, producing a regular rhythm in both all-caps and mixed-case settings, while numerals follow the same faceted logic for a cohesive texture.
Well-suited to environments where fixed-width alignment and a technical voice are beneficial, such as terminal-style UI, code-adjacent typography, dashboards, and tabular readouts. It can also work effectively for industrial branding accents, equipment-style labeling, and concise headings where the faceted geometry becomes a recognizable visual signature.
The overall tone is technical and instrument-like, evoking labeling, schematics, and utilitarian interfaces. Its faceted geometry gives it a retro-futurist edge—precise and engineered rather than expressive or casual—while remaining approachable due to its simple, consistent stroke behavior.
The design appears intended to deliver a distinctive angular, faceted aesthetic while preserving the practical regularity of a monospaced workhorse. By standardizing chamfers and segment angles across letters and numbers, it aims for a coherent system that feels engineered, legible, and consistent in grid-based layouts.
The alphabet shows a strong preference for straight segments and clipped joints, creating a distinctive ‘machined’ silhouette across the set. The sample text demonstrates stable line color and clear character differentiation typical of fixed-width designs, with a slightly square, modular cadence that reads as systematic and orderly.