Sans Faceted Omso 7 is a regular weight, very narrow, monoline, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: posters, titles, logos, game ui, album art, edgy, futuristic, occult, industrial, gamey, impact, worldbuilding, inscriptional, stylistic display, branding, angular, spiky, geometric, faceted, glyphic.
An angular, faceted display sans built from straight strokes and sharp corners, with virtually no true curves. Forms rely on wedge-like terminals, notched joins, and occasional diamond-shaped counters (notably in O/0-like shapes), creating a chiseled silhouette. Strokes stay consistent in thickness while widths vary notably by letter, producing a lively, irregular rhythm. Capitals are tall and narrow with long verticals; lowercase maintains a similar condensed stance with pointed bowls and clipped apertures. Numerals and punctuation continue the same shard-like construction, emphasizing diagonal cuts and asymmetric details.
Best suited to short, high-impact settings such as posters, packaging headlines, game titles and interface labels, band/album graphics, and logo or wordmark work where the faceted construction can be appreciated. It performs especially well when used at medium-to-large sizes with generous tracking and simple background contrast.
The tone is tense and dramatic, evoking runic inscriptions, sci‑fi interfaces, and heavy-metal or fantasy titling. Its sharp geometry reads as cold, aggressive, and high-energy, with a ritualistic or arcane flavor that comes from the spearhead terminals and diamond motifs.
The font appears designed to translate a carved, rune-like aesthetic into a clean monoline structure, replacing curves with planar cuts to create a sharp, futuristic display voice. Its condensed proportions and distinctive terminals suggest an emphasis on striking silhouettes for branding and titling rather than continuous reading.
At text sizes the strong vertical emphasis and tight interior spaces can make words feel densely patterned, while at larger sizes the faceting becomes the primary visual feature. The design favors distinctive silhouettes over smooth readability, and the varied glyph widths add a handmade, emblematic cadence even in longer lines.