Sans Faceted Fupo 2 is a bold, narrow, low contrast, italic, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, sports branding, gaming ui, packaging, futuristic, techno, industrial, aggressive, energetic, high impact, speed emphasis, tech styling, display focus, branding, angular, faceted, compressed, oblique, blocky.
A sharply faceted, oblique sans with planar cuts that replace curves, producing polygonal bowls and chamfered terminals. Strokes are consistently heavy and uniform, with a condensed footprint and tight interior counters that emphasize a compact, punchy rhythm. The forms lean forward with strong diagonals and squared-off corners; joins are crisp and mechanical, and curves (where implied) read as multi-segment facets. Numerals and capitals carry an engineered, sign-like solidity, while lowercase maintains the same angular construction for a highly coherent, geometric texture.
Best suited to short, high-impact settings such as headlines, posters, logos, sports or esports identities, and product/packaging accents where its angular texture can carry the design. It can also work for interface labels or HUD-style graphics at medium-to-large sizes, especially when a technical, high-velocity voice is desired.
The overall tone feels futuristic and industrial, with a motorsport/arcade energy driven by hard edges and forward slant. Its sharp geometry reads assertive and tactical rather than friendly, suggesting speed, machinery, and digital-era design.
The design appears intended to deliver a fast, engineered aesthetic by combining a forward-leaning stance with faceted geometry and uniform, sturdy stroke weight. Its compressed proportions and sharp terminals prioritize impact and visual momentum over softness or traditional readability.
Because counters are tight and many letters rely on similar faceted silhouettes, the face is most effective when given enough size or tracking to preserve internal space. The consistent chamfer language across straight and rounded structures helps it hold together well in all-caps and number-heavy settings.