Sans Faceted Lyju 7 is a bold, wide, low contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, logotypes, game ui, packaging, techno, industrial, arcade, futuristic, mechanical, angular systemization, tech aesthetic, display impact, geometric clarity, angular, faceted, octagonal, geometric, squared.
A heavy, geometric sans built from straight strokes and clipped corners, with planar facets replacing curves throughout. Counters and bowls tend toward octagonal and squared forms, producing a crisp, modular silhouette and a consistent, stencil-like economy of shape without actual breaks in the strokes. Terminals are blunt and sharply chamfered, diagonals are minimal and controlled, and the overall rhythm is compact and blocky, with clear separation between similar forms (notably the angled joins and cut-in corners on letters like S, G, and 2). The lowercase mirrors the uppercase’s construction closely, keeping a uniform, engineered texture across mixed-case settings.
Best suited to headlines, titles, posters, and branding where an angular, engineered look is a feature. It can also work for game UI, tech-themed graphics, packaging, and signage-style treatments, especially when set with generous tracking or used at display sizes where the faceting can be appreciated.
The faceted geometry and hard corners give the face a distinctly technical, game-like attitude—confident, utilitarian, and a bit retro-digital. It reads as purpose-built for environments where sharp, machine-made forms signal precision and strength rather than warmth or softness.
The design appears intended to translate a sans foundation into a hard-edged, planar system that feels fabricated and digital. By standardizing chamfers and reducing curvature, it aims to deliver a strong, modern-industrial voice with clear, repeatable geometry across letters and numerals.
Round characters such as O, C, and G are expressed as chamfered polygons, which helps maintain even color and avoids soft spots in text. Numerals are similarly angular and sign-like, reinforcing the font’s display-forward personality while staying legible at moderate sizes.