Sans Faceted Omzo 7 is a bold, very narrow, monoline, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, logos, album art, game titles, aggressive, futuristic, occult, runic, industrial, thematic display, edgy impact, iconic texture, genre branding, angular, geometric, spiky, faceted, chiseled.
A sharp-edged display sans built from straight, planar strokes and wedge-like terminals, with curves consistently replaced by angled facets. Stems are heavy and compact, while counters and apertures are cut into diamond and triangular shapes that create a jagged internal rhythm. The proportions run tight and condensed with inconsistent character widths, giving the line a staccato texture; diagonals and pointed joins dominate, and many glyphs resolve into spearhead ends or notched corners. Numerals and punctuation follow the same cut-metal geometry, keeping the texture uniform across text.
Best suited to short, high-impact settings such as headlines, posters, title cards, logos, and branding where the angular texture can be appreciated. It works particularly well for genres like metal/punk, gaming, horror, and techno-themed graphics, and for signage or labels that benefit from a carved, hard-edged voice.
The overall tone feels hard, weaponized, and ritualistic, evoking carved glyphs, forged signage, and fantasy or sci‑fi iconography. Its crisp facets and pointed silhouettes project intensity and speed rather than softness or neutrality.
The design appears intended to translate a faceted, chiseled aesthetic into a consistent alphabet—prioritizing angular silhouette and thematic texture over conventional readability for long passages. It aims to deliver a distinctive, emblem-like presence in display typography.
The faceting produces distinctive negative-space patterns (diamond-like bowls and triangular counters) that read strongly at larger sizes, but can become busy as size decreases. Word shapes are highly stylized, with several letters relying on internal cutouts and sharp diagonals for recognition.