Sans Faceted Tyza 5 is a regular weight, normal width, low contrast, italic, tall x-height, monospaced font.
Keywords: code samples, ui labels, dashboards, headings, posters, techy, utilitarian, industrial, retro, tactical, technical tone, interface clarity, retro-futurism, systematic rhythm, angular, faceted, chamfered, geometric, condensed feel.
A slanted, monospaced sans with a distinctly faceted construction: curves are consistently replaced by short planar segments and chamfered corners. Strokes are uniform and low-contrast, with rounded stroke terminals that soften the otherwise angular geometry. Proportions are upright and economical, with a tall x-height and compact counters that keep the texture dense and steady across lines. The rhythm is mechanically even, and the digit and uppercase forms lean into polygonal bowls and clipped joints for a crisp, engineered look.
Well-suited to code samples, terminals, and technical documentation where fixed-width alignment matters. It also works effectively for UI labels, dashboards, and product interfaces that benefit from an engineered, angular voice. For branding, posters, or packaging, it can deliver a retro-tech accent in headlines and short blocks of text.
The overall tone reads technical and utilitarian, like labeling on equipment or a retro-futurist interface. Its angled stance and polygonal shaping add motion and edge, while the monospaced cadence keeps it disciplined and systematic. The result feels industrial, slightly sci‑fi, and purpose-built rather than expressive or decorative.
The design appears intended to bring a faceted, machine-made aesthetic to a monospaced italic, balancing strict spacing with a distinctive polygonal silhouette. Its consistent chamfers and segmented curves suggest an aim for technical character and visual cohesion across alphanumerics, with enough edge to stand out in interface and display contexts.
Many glyphs show deliberate chamfers at corners and octagonal-style bowls, creating a consistent “cut metal” silhouette across letters and numerals. The italic slant is moderate and uniform, helping the face feel active without becoming cursive. Small details—like compact apertures and simplified joins—prioritize clarity at display and UI sizes over airy openness.