Sans Faceted Gusu 14 is a light, normal width, low contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, branding, posters, ui display, signage, techno, industrial, digital, futuristic, architectural, geometric styling, tech branding, interface tone, modular system, angular, faceted, chamfered, monoline, geometric.
A monoline, geometric sans built from straight strokes and chamfered corners, replacing curves with small facets for an octagonal, planar feel. Vertical stems are dominant and clean, with consistent stroke thickness and crisp terminals that often end in short angled cuts. Bowls and rounds (C, O, Q, G, e, o) are constructed as segmented polygons, while diagonals in letters like V, W, X, Y keep a steady rhythm and sharp apexes. Proportions are open and readable in text, with simple, unornamented forms and a slightly technical spacing cadence that suits the angular construction.
Works best in headlines, logos, packaging accents, and posters where the angular facets can read as a deliberate stylistic cue. It is also well-suited to UI display typography, interface labels, and signage for tech, gaming, or industrial contexts, particularly at medium to large sizes where the chamfered details stay crisp.
The faceted construction conveys a precise, engineered tone—evoking digital readouts, sci‑fi interfaces, and industrial labeling. Its sharp geometry feels modern and mechanical rather than friendly or organic, creating a cool, controlled voice for display and short text.
The font appears designed to translate a modular, faceted drawing system into a legible sans alphabet, emphasizing straight geometry and consistent corner cuts over traditional curves. The intention seems to be a contemporary, tech-forward display voice that still holds together in short passages of text.
The design keeps a consistent system of corner cuts across both uppercase and lowercase, which helps unify the alphabet despite the mixture of straight, diagonal, and polygonal forms. Numerals follow the same segmented logic, pairing well with the letters for codes, UI strings, and technical notation.