Sans Faceted Lizo 1 is a regular weight, normal width, low contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, logotypes, ui labels, packaging, techno, industrial, sci‑fi, arcade, mechanical, futuristic edge, geometric branding, digital display, industrial styling, angular, faceted, chamfered, geometric, octagonal.
A crisp, angular sans built from straight strokes and chamfered corners, replacing curves with planar facets that create an octagonal, cut-metal silhouette. Stroke thickness stays even throughout, with squared terminals and frequent 45° cuts at joins and outer corners. Counters are mostly rectangular or octagonal, and the overall rhythm is structured and modular, giving uppercase and lowercase a deliberately engineered feel. The numerals follow the same faceted construction, reading clearly with sharp, segmented-like geometry.
Best suited to display settings where its angular personality is an asset: headlines, posters, branding marks, and short-form messaging. It can also work well for interface labels, signage, or packaging that aims for a technical or industrial voice, especially at medium-to-large sizes where the faceted details stay crisp.
The design projects a technical, futuristic tone—precise, machine-made, and slightly game-like. Its sharp edges and polygonal counters evoke hardware panels, sci‑fi interfaces, and arcade-era display logic while staying clean and controlled rather than decorative.
The font appears intended to translate a geometric, engineered aesthetic into a readable sans, using consistent chamfers and straight segments to suggest machined parts and digital geometry. It prioritizes a distinctive, hard-edged silhouette and uniform construction for a strong, contemporary display presence.
Uppercase forms are compact and blocky, while the lowercase keeps the same hard-edged construction with simplified bowls and shoulders. The faceting is consistent across rounds like C, O, and S, which read as clipped polygons rather than true curves, helping maintain a coherent, grid-friendly texture in lines of text.