Sans Faceted Omga 8 is a light, narrow, monoline, upright, normal x-height, monospaced font.
Keywords: ui labels, code styling, data readouts, headlines, posters, techy, schematic, retro, industrial, futuristic, geometric consistency, technical tone, modular system, retro-futurism, angular, faceted, geometric, condensed, crisp.
A crisp, geometric sans with sharply faceted construction in place of curves. Strokes stay even and consistent, with octagonal/diamond-like turns, clipped terminals, and straight-sided bowls that give letters a technical, drafted feel. Proportions are compact and tall, counters are small and rectilinear, and the overall rhythm is steady and grid-like, producing a clean, modular texture in text.
Well-suited for interface labels, dashboards, and data-display contexts where a compact, orderly texture is helpful. It also works effectively in short headlines, packaging callouts, and posters that want a technical or futuristic flavor; for longer passages, it reads best at moderate sizes where the facets remain clear.
The faceted geometry and disciplined spacing create a tech-forward, schematic tone with a subtle retro-digital edge. It feels utilitarian and engineered rather than expressive, suggesting instruments, systems, and constructed forms.
Likely designed to translate a modern sans skeleton into a planar, polygonal system that stays consistent across the alphabet and numerals. The emphasis appears to be on precision, repeatable geometry, and a distinctive angular signature that reads as engineered and contemporary.
Distinctive pointed joins appear in letters like A, V, W, and Y, while rounded characters (O, Q, C, G) resolve into multi-sided shapes for strong stylistic consistency. The numerals follow the same polygonal logic, maintaining a cohesive, sign-like presence at display sizes.