Sans Faceted Ombi 6 is a regular weight, normal width, monoline, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, logos, packaging, game ui, techy, industrial, retro, mechanical, edgy, geometric stylization, machined look, display impact, tech tone, angular, faceted, chamfered, geometric, octagonal.
A sharp, faceted sans with monoline strokes and corners that resolve into short planar cuts instead of smooth curves. Round letters (C, G, O, Q, e, o) read as polygonal outlines with chamfered joints, while straight-sided forms maintain crisp terminals and clear right angles. Proportions are compact with a steady vertical rhythm, and the overall spacing feels even, producing a clean but deliberately “constructed” texture. Numerals follow the same faceted logic, with angular bowls and clipped corners that keep the set visually consistent.
Best suited to headlines, branding, and short bursts of text where the faceted construction can be appreciated—posters, album or event graphics, packaging accents, and tech-leaning identities. It can also work for game or interface titling where an engineered, angular voice is desired.
The faceting gives the font a technical, machined tone—like lettering cut from metal or plotted for a device interface. It carries a mild retro-computing and sci‑fi flavor without becoming overly decorative, reading as purposeful and slightly edgy.
The design appears intended to translate a geometric sans skeleton into a faceted, cut-corner vocabulary, replacing curves with planar segments for a crisp, manufactured look. The goal seems to be a distinctive display texture while retaining straightforward letterforms and legibility.
The distinctive polygonal treatment is most noticeable in curved characters and in the Q, whose angled tail reinforces the engineered feel. In longer text, the repeated chamfers create a subtle shimmering pattern that stands out more at display sizes than in small UI copy.