Sans Faceted Umju 7 is a very bold, very wide, low contrast, upright, tall x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, logos, posters, game ui, packaging, futuristic, industrial, techno, assertive, arcade, sci‑fi styling, machined geometry, display impact, brand distinctiveness, angular, faceted, chamfered, blocky, modular.
A heavy, geometric sans built from straight strokes and sharp chamfered corners, replacing curves with planar facets. Counters tend toward octagonal/diamond shapes and many joins resolve into clipped terminals, creating a consistent, machined silhouette. The design is mostly monoline in feel, with broad horizontal and vertical spans and compact internal apertures; spacing reads on the tight side, emphasizing dense texture in text. Distinctive details include segmented crossbars (notably in E and e) and pointed, directional diagonals that give many letters a forward-cut profile.
Well-suited to short, high-impact settings such as headlines, logo wordmarks, posters, title cards, esports or game UI, and tech-forward packaging. It performs best where scale and contrast allow the angular facets and cut-in counters to read clearly.
The overall tone is unapologetically futuristic and mechanical, with a game/console energy that feels engineered rather than humanist. Its sharp geometry and dense color produce an imposing, high-impact voice suited to hard-edged sci‑fi, industrial, or cyber-themed branding.
The design appears intended to translate a sci‑fi/industrial aesthetic into a consistent typographic system by enforcing a strict straight-line, chamfered construction across uppercase, lowercase, and figures. The repeated faceting and segmented strokes suggest an aim for a distinctive, branded texture that reads as engineered and futuristic.
Legibility remains strongest at display sizes where the faceting and small apertures can be appreciated; in longer text, the angular joins and compact counters create a busy, patterned rhythm. Numerals match the same faceted logic, with a polygonal 0 and similarly cut forms across the set.