Sans Faceted Umdi 11 is a very bold, wide, monoline, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, branding, sports, gaming, techno, industrial, arcade, tactical, futuristic, impact, modernize, mechanical feel, sci-fi tone, display clarity, octagonal, angular, blocky, square-cut, modular.
A heavy, square-shouldered sans built from straight strokes and clipped corners, with curves consistently replaced by short facets. Counters tend toward squared, octagonal forms, and terminals end in flat cuts or chamfered angles, producing a crisp, mechanical silhouette. The rhythm is compact and sturdy, with broad glyph bodies and clear internal spaces that stay open despite the mass of the strokes. Diagonals are used sparingly and decisively, while rounded letters (like O/C/G) read as geometric rings and brackets rather than true curves.
Best suited to display use: headlines, logos, packaging, team or esports branding, game UI titling, and short callouts where the angular construction can read clearly. It also works well for high-contrast applications like signage, labels, and tech-themed graphics, especially at medium to large sizes.
The faceted geometry and hard corners convey a technical, engineered tone with strong associations to sci‑fi interfaces, arcade and racing aesthetics, and industrial labeling. Its blunt, armored shapes feel assertive and utilitarian, prioritizing impact and structure over warmth or calligraphic nuance.
The design appears intended to translate a bold sans skeleton into a hard-edged, faceted system that feels machined and contemporary. By standardizing chamfers and replacing curves with planar cuts, it aims to deliver a distinctive, high-impact voice optimized for modern, technology-forward display typography.
At larger sizes the chamfered construction becomes a defining texture, giving headings a machined, stencil-like presence without fully breaking strokes. In longer lines, the consistent straight-edge logic keeps words cohesive, though the strong geometry can dominate the page and benefits from generous spacing and simple layouts.