Sans Faceted Rabi 7 is a regular weight, normal width, monoline, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, logos, game ui, album art, runic, futuristic, gaming, ritual, edgy, thematic display, symbolic tone, high impact, world-building, angular, geometric, faceted, triangular, stenciled.
This typeface is built from sharp, faceted strokes with triangular terminals and cut-in counters, creating a consistently angular silhouette in place of curves. Strokes keep a largely even thickness while corners and joins are emphasized through pointed wedges and chamfer-like cuts. The uppercase set reads as a series of constructed glyphs—often using split strokes and internal notches—while the lowercase echoes the same geometry with simplified, narrow forms and occasional dot accents. Overall spacing feels rhythmic but intentionally irregular at the micro level due to the many diagonals and acute angles, producing a jagged, crystalline texture in text.
Best suited for display settings where its angular construction can be appreciated—headlines, posters, titles, branding marks, and short bursts of text. It also fits game interfaces, fantasy/sci‑fi packaging, and event or entertainment graphics where a coded or rune-like aesthetic is desirable. For long passages or very small sizes, the dense facets and sharp joins may be less comfortable to read.
The font conveys a rune-like, techno-tribal tone that feels coded, ceremonial, and game-world adjacent. Its hard angles and knife-edge terminals create an assertive, slightly aggressive voice that reads as futuristic and enigmatic rather than friendly or neutral.
The design appears intended to translate a carved, crystalline, symbol-driven aesthetic into a functional Latin alphabet, prioritizing distinctive silhouettes and thematic texture over conventional neutrality. Its consistent faceting and pointed terminals suggest a deliberate system meant to feel engineered and emblematic in display use.
Many letters rely on triangular apertures and inline cuts to differentiate shapes, and several forms favor diagonals over horizontals, which boosts visual energy but can reduce small-size clarity. Numerals follow the same faceted construction, with angular bends and pointed joins that match the alphabet’s overall motif.