Sans Faceted Lyle 6 is a regular weight, normal width, monoline, upright, normal x-height, monospaced font visually similar to 'Chunkfeeder' by Typeco (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: ui labels, game ui, headlines, posters, signage, techno, industrial, retro, utilitarian, arcade, futuristic, systematic, technical, display-ready, clarity, octagonal, angular, beveled, mechanical, geometric.
A sharply faceted sans with planar cuts that replace curves, giving bowls and rounds an octagonal, chamfered silhouette. Strokes stay consistent in thickness with squared terminals and frequent 45° joins, producing a crisp, mechanical rhythm. Letterforms are compact and boxy with generous inner counters; diagonals are straight and assertive, and the overall texture reads clean and grid-aligned in both caps and lowercase. Numerals follow the same polygonal logic, maintaining a uniform, engineered feel across the set.
Works well for interface labeling, dashboards, and game/arcade UI where a compact, high-contrast geometric texture is desirable. It also suits short headlines, posters, and technical or industrial-themed branding that benefits from an engineered, faceted look.
The faceted geometry conveys a technical, industrial tone with a retro-digital edge, like labeling from equipment panels or early computer/arcade interfaces. Its hard corners and disciplined repetition feel functional and no-nonsense, while the bevel-like cuts add a subtle sci‑fi character.
Likely designed to translate a geometric, panel-cut aesthetic into a practical text face, preserving strict angular rules across the alphabet while keeping counters open for clarity. The consistent chamfering suggests an intention to evoke hardware, terminals, or futuristic signage without relying on decorative flourishes.
The consistent angular construction keeps spacing and color even in running text, and the chamfered corners help avoid harsh pixel-like blockiness while still staying strictly geometric. Distinctive polygonal rounds (notably in O-like shapes) reinforce the font’s modular, machined personality.