Sans Faceted Mibu 12 is a regular weight, normal width, low contrast, upright, normal x-height, monospaced font visually similar to 'Debugger' by Dharma Type (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: code ui, terminal text, game ui, tech branding, signage, technical, industrial, retro, utilitarian, digital, systematic design, screen clarity, geometric styling, retro tech feel, octagonal, chamfered, angular, stencil-like, modular.
A geometric, angular sans with chamfered corners that replace curves with crisp planar facets. Strokes are even and sturdy, with squared terminals and a compact, modular construction that reads cleanly at medium sizes. Rounds like O/C/G are built from straight segments, giving the alphabet an octagonal rhythm; diagonals (A, K, V, W, X, Y) are steep and firmly drawn. Numerals share the same faceted logic, with a distinctive, slashed zero and strong right-angled joins throughout.
Well-suited to interfaces that benefit from a disciplined, grid-based voice—such as terminals, developer tools, dashboards, and in-game HUDs. It can also serve as a display or headline accent for tech-forward branding, labels, and signage where an angular, engineered texture is desired.
The overall tone is technical and utilitarian, combining a retro terminal/arcade feel with industrial signage clarity. Its faceted geometry conveys precision and toughness, leaning more engineered than expressive.
The design appears intended to deliver a robust, screen-friendly sans with a distinctive faceted construction, balancing familiarity with a purposeful hard-edged character. Its modular geometry suggests an emphasis on systematic consistency and clear recognition across letters and numerals.
In text settings the consistent cell-like spacing and blocky counters create a steady, mechanical cadence. The faceting is prominent but controlled, keeping letterforms recognizable while adding a distinctive hard-edged texture to paragraphs and UI-like strings.