Sans Faceted Akma 12 is a very bold, wide, monoline, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, branding, packaging, game ui, futuristic, industrial, techy, assertive, game-like, display impact, tech aesthetic, industrial styling, arcade tone, angular, chamfered, octagonal, blocky, geometric.
This typeface is built from heavy, even strokes with a distinctly angular, faceted construction. Corners are consistently chamfered, turning many bowls and terminals into octagonal forms rather than true curves, and horizontals/verticals read as crisp, planar edges. Counters are compact and rectangular-to-octagonal, with tight apertures that reinforce a dense, high-impact texture. Proportions feel broad and stable, with squared-off shoulders and mechanical joins that keep the rhythm rigid and uniform across uppercase, lowercase, and numerals.
Best suited to short-to-medium display settings where strong silhouette and angular styling are assets—headlines, poster typography, logotypes, sports or tech branding, product packaging, and game or interface titles. It can also work for labels and signage where a rigid, industrial voice is desired, while extended body text may feel heavy due to dense counters and tight apertures.
The overall tone is modern and engineered, with a hard-edged, synthetic feel that suggests technology, machinery, and sci‑fi interfaces. Its mass and sharp facets give it a confident, almost armored voice that reads as bold and action-oriented rather than friendly or delicate.
The design appears intended to translate a geometric sans framework into a faceted, chamfered aesthetic—replacing curves with planar cuts to evoke machined surfaces and digital/arcade-era construction. Its consistent stroke weight and disciplined corner logic prioritize impact and stylistic coherence across the full alphanumeric set.
Distinctive chamfers appear at many outer corners and at key interior corners, creating a consistent “cut metal” motif. The lowercase echoes the uppercase’s geometry rather than adopting calligraphic or humanist traits, helping mixed-case settings maintain the same compact, angular color. Numerals follow the same faceted logic, producing a cohesive, display-forward set.