Sans Other Faba 8 is a very bold, wide, medium contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, logos, game ui, signage, industrial, arcade, poster, techno, brutalist, impact, retro tech, ruggedness, modularity, display, squared, angular, chiseled, stencil-like, geometric.
This typeface is built from blocky, squared forms with crisp right angles and occasional diagonal cuts that give corners a chamfered, carved look. Strokes are heavy and largely uniform, with counters kept compact and often rectangular, producing a dense, high-impact texture. Curves are minimized in favor of straight segments; round letters resolve into squared bowls and notches, and several terminals end in sharp, wedge-like points. Spacing feels compact in running text, and the overall construction reads as deliberately rigid and modular rather than calligraphic.
Best suited to short, high-contrast applications where its heavy, angular shapes can be appreciated—headlines, posters, branding marks, product labels, and game or tech interfaces. It can also work for large-format signage or badges, but the tight counters and dense color suggest avoiding small sizes or long reading passages.
The design projects a bold, mechanical attitude with a retro-digital edge, evoking arcade screens, industrial labels, and hard-edged sci‑fi signage. Its sharp notches and cut-in corners add an aggressive, engineered tone that feels utilitarian and attention-seeking rather than friendly.
The font appears designed to maximize impact through solid, modular letterforms and stylized corner cuts, aiming for a rugged, machine-made aesthetic. Its consistent geometric logic suggests an intention to feel structured and assertive while nodding to retro digital and industrial display traditions.
Distinctive triangular terminals appear on letters like V/W/Y, while stepped joins and rectangular apertures create a pixel-adjacent, display-driven rhythm. The lowercase mirrors the uppercase’s rigid geometry, preserving the same angular personality and making mixed-case text feel uniformly constructed.