Sans Faceted Abnok 2 is a very bold, normal width, monoline, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, sports branding, team apparel, signage, athletic, industrial, retro, bold, technical, impact, sport, durability, geometric styling, display voice, octagonal, angular, chamfered, blocky, compact.
A heavy, block-built sans with faceted, chamfered corners that replace curves with straight planes. Strokes keep a consistent thickness, and counters are mostly rectangular or octagonal, producing a crisp, cut-out look. The letters sit on a sturdy baseline with compact apertures and squared terminals, while diagonals on forms like K, V, W, X, and Y are simplified into firm, planar joins. Numerals follow the same geometry, with the 0 and 8 reading as enclosed, beveled shapes that match the alphabet’s hard-edged rhythm.
Best suited to large-scale applications where its faceted geometry can read clearly: headlines, posters, sports or team-themed branding, and bold promotional graphics. It can also work for signage and short labels where an industrial, hard-edged voice is desirable, though the compact openings suggest using it sparingly for extended reading.
The overall tone is assertive and utilitarian, with a sporty, scoreboard-like energy and a faintly retro, arcade-industrial feel. Its sharp facets and dense silhouettes communicate strength and immediacy, favoring impact over softness.
The design appears intended to deliver a tough, high-impact display voice by translating rounded shapes into beveled, planar forms and keeping stroke weight uniform. The consistent corner chamfers and squared counters suggest a goal of strong reproduction in bold branding contexts while maintaining a distinctive, geometric identity.
Distinctive notched and beveled details create a consistent visual motif across uppercase, lowercase, and figures, helping the set feel cohesive even at display sizes. The lowercase maintains the same blocky construction as the caps, giving mixed-case text a uniform, poster-forward color rather than a delicate typographic contrast.