Sans Faceted Humar 5 is a very light, normal width, monoline, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: logo, titles, posters, game ui, album art, runic, futuristic, ritual, angular, technical, thematic display, symbolic feel, inscriptional look, sci-fi tone, constructed geometry, geometric, chiseled, crisp, spiky, pointed.
A sharply angular, geometric display face built from straight strokes and faceted joins, with curves consistently replaced by diagonals and pointed corners. Strokes remain even and clean, forming open, skeletal counters and distinctive triangular bowls and terminals. Proportions are narrow-to-moderate with noticeable glyph-to-glyph width variation; many characters lean on V-shaped diagonals and diamond forms (notably in O/0), creating a jagged, rhythmic texture in text. The lowercase echoes the uppercase structure with simplified, stick-like forms and occasional split or notched terminals, maintaining a cohesive, etched look.
This font suits logos and wordmarks that benefit from a constructed, emblematic voice, as well as titles, posters, and packaging that call for a sharp, angular texture. It also fits game UI, fantasy/sci‑fi headings, and themed event graphics where a rune-like or coded aesthetic supports the narrative.
The overall tone feels rune-like and arcane, with a sci‑fi edge from its faceted geometry and schematic simplicity. Its sharp points and angular rhythm suggest coded inscriptions, fantasy artifacts, or techno-mystic interfaces rather than everyday neutrality.
The design intention appears to be a stylized, inscriptional sans built from planar facets—prioritizing distinctive silhouettes and thematic atmosphere over conventional text ergonomics. Its consistent straight-line construction and pointed terminals aim to evoke carved marks or engineered symbols while remaining alphabetic and usable for short passages.
Readability is strongest at larger sizes where the distinctive angular silhouettes separate clearly; at smaller sizes, similarly constructed letters can visually converge due to the shared diagonal logic and open counters. The numerals follow the same faceted construction, with especially emblematic diamond-based forms that read as symbolic and decorative.