Sans Faceted Kari 8 is a bold, very wide, low contrast, upright, tall x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, logos, posters, gaming ui, sports branding, futuristic, tech, industrial, mechanical, sporty, tech aesthetic, impact display, systematic geometry, branding voice, octagonal, chamfered, angular, blocky, modular.
A heavy, angular sans built from straight strokes and clipped corners, replacing curves with chamfered, faceted turns. Counters tend toward rounded-rectangle forms, and terminals are predominantly flat with consistent diagonal cut-ins that create a crisp, engineered rhythm. The face reads tightly constructed and geometric, with broad proportions and a dense, uniform color; diagonals (as in K, V, W, X, Y) are clean and assertive, while bowls (B, D, O, P, Q) feel squared-off and technical. Numerals follow the same faceted logic, with compact interior counters and distinctive corner cuts that keep them visually consistent with the caps.
Best suited to display settings where its angular detailing can be appreciated—headlines, titles, logos, packaging callouts, and on-screen UI elements for games or tech products. It can also work for short labels and wayfinding-style text when you want a strong, engineered aesthetic, but its dense texture makes it less ideal for long-form reading at small sizes.
The overall tone is forward-looking and machine-made, with a confident, high-impact presence. Its faceted geometry suggests sci‑fi interfaces, motorsport graphics, and industrial labeling, while the broad stance gives it a loud, display-first attitude.
The design appears intended to deliver a distinctive, faceted techno sans with strong impact and a consistent geometric system. By standardizing chamfered corners and squared counters across caps, lowercase, and figures, it aims for a cohesive, industrial voice that remains legible while feeling deliberately stylized.
Spacing and shapes favor a continuous, blocky texture in text, with distinctive notches and chamfers doing much of the character differentiation. The lowercase maintains the same constructed feel as the uppercase rather than becoming calligraphic, helping mixed-case settings look cohesive and “designed” rather than neutral.