Sans Faceted Ohzi 4 is a regular weight, normal width, medium contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, branding, game ui, titles, techno, futuristic, geometric, industrial, digital, sci-fi styling, geometric system, distinct display, modular look, angular, faceted, monoline, octagonal, stenciled.
An angular, faceted sans with strokes built from straight segments and clipped corners rather than curves. The overall construction feels monoline, with consistent stroke thickness and sharp joins that create a planar, polygonal rhythm. Counters and bowls are often suggested by open shapes, chamfers, and cut-ins, giving many letters a semi-stenciled look with deliberate gaps. Proportions sit in a practical, readable range, while the geometry introduces distinctive silhouettes and a slightly mechanical texture across words.
Best suited for display applications such as headlines, posters, logotypes, and tech-oriented branding where its faceted construction can read clearly at larger sizes. It can also work for interface labels or in-world typography in games and motion graphics when used with generous sizing and spacing.
The font conveys a futuristic, techno-industrial tone—precise, engineered, and a bit cryptic. Its faceted geometry reads as digital or sci‑fi, with a controlled harshness that feels suited to systems, devices, and speculative worlds rather than everyday neutrality.
The design intent appears to be a geometric sans that replaces curves with planar facets to create a distinctive, high-tech voice. By emphasizing chamfered terminals and open constructions, it aims to feel engineered and modular while remaining recognizable in Latin letterforms.
Letterforms rely on chamfers and open apertures, which increases distinctiveness but can also make similar shapes (especially at small sizes) feel puzzle-like. The strong angular motif stays consistent across uppercase, lowercase, and numerals, producing a cohesive display texture with a patterned, modular feel.