Sans Faceted Ompe 5 is a regular weight, narrow, monoline, upright, short x-height font.
Keywords: logos, posters, headlines, packaging, game ui, gothic, angular, retro, mechanical, severe, display impact, emblematic tone, carved feel, geometric consistency, retro edge, faceted, chiseled, geometric, monolinear, broken curves.
A faceted, geometric sans with monoline strokes and crisp planar corners that replace curves with short angled segments. The forms are predominantly vertical and compact, with a narrow overall footprint and tight interior counters that read as beveled cutouts. Terminals are blunt and often angled, and many characters feature peaked, roof-like tops that create a consistent rhythmic silhouette across caps and lowercase. The numerals match the same chiseled construction, staying rigid and rectilinear with minimal modulation.
This style is well suited to logos, titles, and short headline settings where its angular construction can carry the identity. It can work effectively on posters, album/film graphics, and packaging where a hard-edged, crafted look is desired, and it also fits interface/display contexts for games or tech-themed branding when used at display sizes.
The overall tone is sharp and architectural, evoking blackletter-adjacent geometry without traditional calligraphic contrast. Its pointed joins and beveled corners feel industrial and game-like, giving a slightly medieval, emblematic edge while remaining clean and schematic.
The letterforms appear designed to translate a carved or machined aesthetic into a clean, consistent display face, using faceting to suggest bevels and cut planes while keeping stroke weight even. The intent is likely to provide a distinctive, emblematic texture that nods to gothic geometry and retro-digital styling without relying on decorative serifs.
Spacing and rhythm feel deliberately compact, with strong vertical emphasis and repeated triangular motifs that help words form a distinctive, spiky texture. The design reads best when the faceting can remain visible, as small sizes may compress the interior angles and counters.