Sans Faceted Kony 3 is a bold, wide, low contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, logos, game ui, packaging, techno, futuristic, industrial, arcade, mechanical, digital tone, impact display, geometric consistency, industrial signage, sci-fi styling, octagonal, chamfered, angular, modular, monoline.
A blocky, faceted sans with octagonal counters and consistent chamfered corners that replace curves with straight planes. Strokes are heavy and largely uniform, producing a sturdy, monoline silhouette with crisp terminals and squared-off joins. The design leans horizontally in feel, with generous widths and compact interior apertures; bowls and rounds read as clipped rectangles, and diagonals (as in K, V, W, X, Y) are constructed from straight segments rather than smooth transitions. Overall spacing appears even and deliberate, creating a tight, rhythmic texture that stays highly geometric in both caps and lowercase.
Best suited to display roles where its angular construction can read clearly and set a strong tone—headlines, posters, logos, game/UI titles, and packaging or product marks. It also works well for short technical labels and wayfinding-style text at larger sizes where the tight apertures and faceting remain legible.
The letterforms evoke a synthetic, engineered tone—clean, assertive, and distinctly digital. Its faceted geometry suggests sci-fi interfaces, arcade-era display typography, and utilitarian industrial labeling, with a confident, no-nonsense presence.
The design appears intended to translate a digital/industrial aesthetic into a coherent alphabet by substituting curves with planar facets and maintaining uniform stroke weight. It prioritizes visual impact and geometric consistency, delivering a robust, engineered look for modern display typography.
Distinctive details include squared, step-like shaping in S and Z, octagonal O/0 forms, and a single-storey a with angular terminals, all reinforcing a coherent polygonal construction. The numerals follow the same clipped-corner logic, keeping signage-like clarity and a consistent, machine-cut feel.