Sans Faceted Rypi 11 is a bold, wide, low contrast, italic, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, branding, sportswear, gaming ui, futuristic, sporty, aggressive, technical, industrial, speed, impact, tech feel, angular, faceted, chamfered, oblique, compact spacing.
A heavy, oblique sans with sharply faceted construction and chamfered corners that replace most curves with planar cuts. Strokes are uniformly thick with minimal modulation, and counters are often polygonal or slotted, giving round forms like O/Q/0 a cut-out, techno geometry. Terminals tend to be clipped and forward-leaning, producing a fast rightward rhythm; joins are tight and the overall texture is dense and high-impact. Uppercase forms are broad and sturdy, while the lowercase retains the same angular vocabulary with simplified bowls and short, angled shoulders, keeping a consistent, mechanical silhouette across the set.
Best suited to short, bold statements: headlines, posters, logotypes, product marks, and punchy subheads where its faceted oblique forms can carry the design. It also fits sports, racing, gaming, and tech-themed UI or packaging where a fast, engineered tone is desired.
The face reads as dynamic and performance-oriented, with a motorsport/arcade-tech energy driven by its oblique stance and hard-edged facets. Its sharp cuts and dense weight convey speed, intensity, and a distinctly engineered feel rather than softness or warmth.
The design appears intended to translate a techno/sport aesthetic into a sturdy, highly legible display sans by using faceted geometry, clipped terminals, and an oblique stance to suggest speed and precision while maintaining consistent, low-modulation stroke weight.
Distinctive diagonals and clipped apertures can make similar shapes (notably angular rounds and some lowercase bowls) feel closely related, which increases stylistic cohesion while asking for generous sizing in longer copy. The numerals match the letterforms closely, using the same chamfered geometry and forward-leaning stance for a unified, display-first system.