Sans Faceted Roze 11 is a regular weight, very wide, medium contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, logos, posters, packaging, gaming ui, techno, futuristic, digital, angular, industrial, sci‑fi styling, geometric system, display impact, interface tone, geometric, modular, chamfered, octagonal, monoline.
A geometric sans built from straight strokes and sharp corners, with curves consistently replaced by chamfered, faceted segments. Strokes read as largely monoline with crisp terminals and a slightly pixel-stepped feel at some diagonals, reinforcing a constructed, modular rhythm. Counters are open and rectangular-to-octagonal, and the overall footprint runs broad with generous horizontal spans. Uppercase forms are clean and schematic, while lowercase keeps the same hard-edged logic with simplified joins and short, squared shoulders.
Best suited to headlines and short-form display settings where its angular geometry can read clearly—branding marks, tech and entertainment posters, product titling, packaging accents, and game/interface styling. It can also work for pull quotes or section headers when a futuristic, engineered voice is desired.
The letterforms convey a techno, sci‑fi tone—precise, engineered, and display-forward. Its faceted construction and wide stance suggest interfaces, machines, and synthetic environments rather than handwritten or editorial warmth. The texture feels crisp and slightly game/retro-digital due to the stepped diagonals and planar corners.
The font appears designed to translate a geometric sans into a faceted, planar system—replacing curves with clipped corners to create a consistent, machine-made aesthetic. The wide proportions and crisp stroke endings suggest an emphasis on presence and legibility in display contexts, with forms optimized for a clean, synthetic visual identity.
The design maintains strong consistency in how it handles curvature: bowls, rounds, and diagonals all resolve into flat planes and clipped corners, creating a cohesive “cut” geometry across letters and numerals. Spacing appears comfortable for display sizes, with distinctive silhouettes that prioritize shape identity over traditional typographic softness.