Sans Faceted Orpy 2 is a regular weight, narrow, medium contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, game ui, tech branding, signage, tech, futuristic, industrial, arcade, sci-fi, geometric system, display impact, digital aesthetic, industrial voice, schematic clarity, angular, faceted, octagonal, geometric, monolinear.
A geometric sans built from straight strokes and clipped corners, replacing curves with crisp facets. Strokes are largely uniform in thickness, with squared terminals and frequent 45° chamfers that give counters an octagonal feel. Proportions run narrow overall, with tight apertures and compact bowls; diagonals are used sparingly but decisively for joins and corner cuts. The lowercase keeps a simple, constructed skeleton with single-storey forms and a restrained, mechanical rhythm that stays consistent across letters and numerals.
Best suited to display sizes where the faceted detailing can read clearly—headlines, posters, game and sci‑fi UI, and tech-oriented branding. It can also work for short labels and signage when a crisp, engineered voice is desired, while extended small-size body text may feel rigid due to the tight apertures and angular construction.
The faceted construction and hard, planar corners create a distinctly technical, futuristic tone, reminiscent of digital displays, arcade graphics, and industrial labeling. Its sharp geometry feels precise and engineered rather than humanist, projecting a cool, utilitarian confidence.
The font appears designed to translate a sans skeleton into an all-straight, corner-cut system, prioritizing a consistent geometric rule set over organic curves. The intent reads as creating a modern, machine-made aesthetic that stays legible while strongly signaling a digital/industrial character.
The design leans on repeated corner-cut motifs to maintain coherence, giving round letters like O/C/G a polygonal silhouette and making punctuation and small details feel intentionally schematic. The overall texture is clean and high-contrast against the page due to the monolinear strokes and crisp edges.