Sans Faceted Rony 11 is a regular weight, very wide, monoline, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, logos, ui labels, posters, game titles, futuristic, techy, industrial, gaming, sci‑fi, digital feel, mechanical look, display impact, modular system, octagonal, squared, angular, geometric, modular.
A geometric sans with squared, faceted outlines that replace curves with crisp chamfers and 45° cuts. Strokes stay even throughout, creating a clean, constructed rhythm with rounded corners avoided in favor of planar joints. Counters are mostly rectangular or octagonal, and terminals tend to end in flat or chamfered caps; diagonals appear as straight segments with consistent angles. The overall silhouette feels broad and low, with generous horizontal spans and a tight, engineered look across both caps and lowercase.
Best suited to display and interface contexts where a crisp, high-tech voice is desired—headlines, logo wordmarks, game titles, product naming, and on-screen UI labels. It can work for short paragraphs in controlled settings, but its strong angularity is most effective when given ample size, spacing, and contrast.
The faceted geometry and monoline construction convey a futuristic, technical tone reminiscent of digital interfaces, industrial labeling, and sci‑fi worldbuilding. Its sharp corners and wide stance read assertive and utilitarian, with a slight arcade/gaming energy when used in short bursts.
The design appears intended to translate a rectilinear, engineered aesthetic into a readable sans, using consistent chamfer angles to suggest speed, machinery, and digital hardware. It prioritizes a distinctive geometric texture and a clean, modular system over softness or traditional humanist detailing.
Letterforms show a strong preference for rectilinear construction: rounded shapes like O/Q are rendered as octagonal frames, and several glyphs use cut-in notches or inset joins that emphasize a mechanical, modular drawing logic. The sample text demonstrates good consistency of angles and joins at paragraph scale, but the sharp geometry makes it most distinctive at display sizes where the chamfers remain visually legible.