Sans Faceted Orbu 5 is a regular weight, normal width, monoline, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: branding, posters, headlines, ui labels, gaming, futuristic, techno, industrial, digital, sci‑fi, futuristic voice, modular system, engineered aesthetic, display impact, angular, faceted, squared, modular, geometric.
A geometric sans built from straight segments and crisp facets, replacing most curves with squared corners, chamfers, and planar cuts. Strokes stay consistently monoline, while terminals often end in blunt, squared stops or short horizontal/vertical bars that act like inset “caps.” Counters tend toward rounded-rectangle shapes with open apertures in letters like C, G, and S, giving the design an engineered, modular rhythm. The lowercase is compact and structured, with single-storey forms (notably a and g) and a simplified, squared construction that stays consistent across letters and numerals.
Well suited for tech branding, sci‑fi or gaming titles, posters, and product/packaging where a contemporary engineered voice is desired. It can also work for UI labels, dashboards, and signage-style applications where a clean, modular look is more important than long-form reading comfort.
The overall tone reads technical and forward-looking—more like interface labeling or hardware marking than traditional editorial text. Its faceted geometry and clipped corners create a controlled, machine-made feel with a subtle “digital display” edge, suggesting precision and modernity rather than warmth or informality.
The design appears intended to translate a modern geometric sans into a faceted, planar construction—delivering a consistent, systemized alphabet that feels fabricated and digital. By prioritizing straight edges, chamfers, and squared counters, it aims to project precision and a futuristic identity while remaining straightforward and readable.
Legibility is helped by clear, open shapes and distinct silhouettes, but the many squared joints and inset terminal details make it feel most at home at display sizes or in short UI-style strings. Numerals follow the same angular logic, with squared bowls and flat cuts that keep a cohesive, system-like appearance.