Sans Faceted Gepe 6 is a regular weight, normal width, low contrast, italic, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, branding, logotypes, sports, tech ui, futuristic, technical, cyberpunk, racing, industrial, tech aesthetic, motion feel, interface tone, display impact, angular, beveled, geometric, octagonal, segmented.
A slanted, faceted sans with strokes built from straight segments and chamfered corners, substituting planar facets for curves throughout. Letterforms show an octagonal logic in bowls and counters, with crisp terminals and a consistent, low-contrast stroke structure. The italic angle is steady across caps, lowercase, and numerals, and spacing feels moderately open, helping the sharp geometry read cleanly despite the segmented construction. Numerals and round letters (O, Q, 0, 8, 9) emphasize the beveled, polygonal silhouette, while diagonals and verticals keep a taut, engineered rhythm.
Well-suited to display roles where its faceted geometry can be appreciated: headlines, posters, product branding, and logotypes for tech, automotive, or esports contexts. It can also work for UI labels and short navigational text in interface or HUD-style designs, where a technical, futuristic voice is desired.
The overall tone is sleek and machine-made, evoking digital instrumentation, sci‑fi interfaces, and speed-oriented branding. Its angled stance and cut-corner geometry convey motion and precision, with a cool, high-tech attitude.
The font appears designed to translate a geometric, cut-metal aesthetic into an italic sans, prioritizing sharp silhouettes and consistent faceting over smooth curves. The intent seems to be a contemporary, speed-and-precision look that stays legible while delivering a distinctive sci‑fi/industrial character.
The design mixes near-monoline strokes with frequent internal joints and clipped corners, creating a distinctive “constructed” texture in longer lines of text. Uppercase forms read especially bold in silhouette thanks to the faceted bowls and squared-off joins, while the lowercase maintains the same angular vocabulary for a cohesive system.