Sans Faceted Rolu 10 is a light, very wide, monoline, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, branding, logos, sci-fi ui, futuristic, techno, geometric, architectural, sci-fi, geometric styling, tech flavor, display impact, systematic design, angular, faceted, polygonal, chamfered, modular.
This typeface is built from thin, even strokes and a faceted geometry that replaces curves with straight segments and shallow angles. Many bowls and rounds read as multi-sided, slightly squashed octagons, with frequent chamfered corners and occasional open joins that keep counters airy. The overall silhouette is extended and low, with generous horizontal reach, while terminals are predominantly blunt and angled rather than rounded. Lowercase forms echo the uppercase construction closely, creating a consistent, modular rhythm; the digit set follows the same polygonal logic, including a slashed zero.
Best suited to headlines, short phrases, and identity work where the faceted geometry can be appreciated at medium to large sizes. It also fits futuristic UI mockups, game/film titles, and tech-event graphics. For dense paragraphs or small on-screen text, the angular bowls and open joins may call for larger sizing and ample spacing.
The faceted construction and engineered linework give the font a distinctly futuristic, technical tone. It feels synthetic and device-like, evoking interface labeling, sci‑fi titling, and geometric signage rather than handwritten or humanist warmth. The steady monoline rhythm reads clean and controlled, with a slightly experimental edge from the angular “curve” substitutions.
The design appears intended to translate a geometric, polygon-based drawing system into a readable sans, prioritizing a cohesive faceted aesthetic over conventional curves. Its extended proportions and consistent stroke logic suggest an emphasis on distinctive display impact and a contemporary, technology-forward voice.
Several glyphs employ stylized open apertures and segmented joins (notably in C/E/S-like shapes), which adds character but can reduce clarity at small sizes. The close stylistic alignment between uppercase and lowercase supports display settings where a unified, schematic look is desired.