Sans Faceted Abdas 6 is a very bold, narrow, monoline, upright, normal x-height font visually similar to 'Sicret' by Mans Greback and 'Heavy Boxing' by Vozzy (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: headlines, posters, logos, sportswear, packaging, industrial, retro, arcade, futuristic, tactical, impact, mechanical tone, display clarity, brand voice, geometric consistency, angular, chiseled, faceted, blocky, octagonal.
A heavy, compact sans built from straight strokes and clipped corners, replacing curves with sharp planar facets. Counters and bowls are squared-off and often octagonal, producing a consistent “cut metal” silhouette across letters and numerals. Vertical stems dominate, with firm, flat terminals and occasional stepped joins that add a mechanical rhythm. Proportions are tight and space-efficient, with simplified interior shapes that keep forms stable at large sizes and in high-contrast settings.
Best suited for bold display settings such as headlines, posters, wordmarks, team or esports-style branding, and packaging where a hard-edged, technical voice is desired. It also fits UI-style titling, labels, and short bursts of text where strong geometric texture and quick impact matter more than extended-reading comfort.
The faceted geometry and blunt, engineered shapes give the face an industrial, game-like tone—part retro arcade, part sci‑fi interface. Its sharp edges and compact stance feel assertive and utilitarian, suggesting machinery, signage, and technical labeling rather than softness or elegance.
The design appears intended to deliver maximum punch with a distinctive faceted construction, creating a unified, mechanical look across the full alphanumeric set. By minimizing curves and relying on clipped corners and rectangular counters, it aims for a rugged, modern-industrial aesthetic that remains legible in large, graphic applications.
Distinctive angular construction appears consistently in both cases, with lowercase echoing the uppercase’s block structure rather than introducing calligraphic contrast. Numerals follow the same clipped-corner logic, staying highly graphic and uniform in texture. The overall color on the page is dense, with crisp interior cutouts that help retain character recognition despite the compact spacing.