Sans Faceted Lyro 4 is a regular weight, normal width, low contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, logos, posters, ui display, signage, techno, industrial, futuristic, arcade, mechanical, tech styling, geometric consistency, display impact, ui clarity, chamfered, octagonal, angular, monoline, geometric.
A faceted, geometric sans built from straight strokes and clipped corners that replace curves with chamfered facets. Strokes are monoline and consistent, with squared terminals and frequent octagonal counters (notably in O/0 and rounded letters). The design has compact, blocky proportions and a slightly modular feel, balancing wide, open shapes (E, F, T) with more enclosed forms (B, P, R). Lowercase follows the same angular logic with simplified bowls and a single-storey a, producing a cohesive, engineered rhythm across text.
Best suited to display sizes where the angular construction and chamfered details can be appreciated—headlines, branding marks, posters, and product or event graphics. It can also work for interface headers, game HUD elements, and wayfinding-style labels where a technical, engineered aesthetic is desired.
The overall tone is technical and machine-made, suggesting digital interfaces and manufactured signage rather than handwriting or editorial warmth. Its sharp planes and clipped corners give a sci‑fi and game UI flavor, with a crisp, assertive presence that reads as contemporary and utilitarian.
The design appears intended to translate sans-serif skeletons into a planar, cut-corner geometry that feels digital and constructed. By standardizing strokes and replacing curves with facets, it aims for a coherent techno voice that stays legible while emphasizing a stylized, modular silhouette.
The faceting is applied consistently across the alphabet, creating recognizable silhouettes while keeping counters relatively open for clarity. Numerals echo the same octagonal construction, helping alphanumerics feel unified in settings like codes, labels, and UI readouts.