Sans Faceted Rabi 2 is a regular weight, normal width, monoline, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: logos, posters, game ui, album covers, titles, futuristic, runic, aggressive, industrial, techno, stand out, thematic display, sci-fi styling, symbolic texture, angular, geometric, faceted, sharp, chiseled.
A sharply angular display sans built from straight strokes and planar facets, replacing curves with clipped diagonals and pointed joins. Strokes are consistently thick, with abrupt terminals, hard corners, and frequent triangular counters (notably in forms like A, D, P, and R). Proportions vary noticeably from glyph to glyph, producing an intentionally irregular rhythm; many letters lean on wedge-like diagonals and diamond motifs (e.g., O/0 as a rotated square). The lowercase echoes the uppercase construction, with simplified, geometric forms and minimal differentiation, while numerals and punctuation follow the same faceted, cut-metal logic.
Best suited to short, attention-grabbing text such as logos, title treatments, posters, game UI headings, and album or event graphics where its angular texture can be a feature. It works well at larger sizes and with generous tracking, and is less appropriate for long-form reading or small body copy.
The tone reads bold, coded, and high-energy—somewhere between sci‑fi interface lettering and carved, rune-like inscription. Its sharp geometry and spiky silhouettes create a tense, assertive voice that feels mechanical and combative rather than friendly or neutral.
The design appears intended to deliver a distinctive, instantly recognizable voice through faceted geometry and simplified, chiseled letterforms. It prioritizes striking silhouettes and a consistent sharp-edged construction over conventional readability, making it ideal for themed branding and display typography.
Because many characters are highly stylized and share similar angular structures, legibility can drop in smaller sizes or dense settings, especially where triangular counters and diagonal strokes dominate. The distinctive diamond ‘O’ shape and wedge-based bowls become strong visual signatures in headlines and logos.