Sans Faceted Raze 7 is a regular weight, normal width, low contrast, italic, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, logos, gaming, album art, edgy, futuristic, techno, playful, angular, distinctive voice, sci-fi styling, dynamic motion, geometric display, faceted, chiseled, geometric, monoline, sharp-cornered.
A sharply faceted, geometric sans with planar cuts that replace most curves, yielding diamond-like bowls and hard, angled terminals. Strokes read largely monoline with minimal modulation, and the overall texture is lively due to a consistent forward slant and frequent diagonal joins. Counters tend to be compact and polygonal, with open apertures and pointed interior corners that emphasize the cut, crystalline construction. Spacing feels moderately open in running text, while letterforms maintain a slightly irregular, hand-cut rhythm despite strong structural consistency.
Best suited to display settings where the faceted construction can read clearly—headlines, posters, packaging, and logo/wordmark work. It also fits gaming, sci‑fi, and event/promotional graphics that benefit from an angular, high-energy tone; for long passages, larger sizes help preserve clarity around the tight polygonal counters.
The font conveys an edgy, techno-leaning energy with a playful, game-like sharpness. Its crystalline angles and italic momentum suggest speed and impact, giving headlines a distinctly futuristic, stylized voice.
The design appears intended to translate a sans skeleton into a cut-stone, crystalline aesthetic, prioritizing a distinctive silhouette and forward motion over conventional smoothness. Its consistent facet language across caps, lowercase, and numerals suggests a cohesive display face meant to deliver instant stylistic identity.
Diagonal strokes dominate, creating a dynamic zig-zag cadence across words, while round characters (like O and 0) become rotated, faceted shapes that stand out as a signature motif. Numerals follow the same chiseled logic, with clear, angular silhouettes designed more for character than neutrality.