Sans Faceted Laja 7 is a regular weight, wide, low contrast, italic, normal x-height font.
Keywords: game ui, sci-fi titles, tech branding, posters, headlines, futuristic, techno, angular, edgy, industrial, futurism, interface tone, impact, speed, faceted, chiseled, geometric, mechanical, sharp-cornered.
This typeface is built from straight strokes and clipped corners, replacing curves with planar facets and short diagonal cuts. Letterforms lean forward with an oblique, kinetic stance, and the rhythm is driven by squared counters and chamfered joins rather than smooth terminals. Strokes stay visually even throughout, while many glyphs show small step-like notches and abrupt angle changes that create a deliberately machined, slightly jagged texture. Overall spacing reads on the open side, helping the complex outlines stay legible at display sizes.
Best suited to short-form display settings where its angular texture can read as a feature: game titles and UI accents, sci‑fi or cyber-themed posters, technology or hardware branding, and impactful headlines. It can work for brief lines of text in larger sizes, but the faceting and notched detailing are most effective when given room to resolve.
The faceted construction and oblique posture give the font a sci‑fi, engineered tone—like lettering stamped, cut, or assembled from hard parts. Its sharp geometry suggests speed, interfaces, and synthetic environments, while the rougher edge behavior adds a gritty, game-like attitude.
The design appears intended to translate a futuristic, mechanical aesthetic into an approachable sans structure, using chamfered geometry and segmented curves to imply speed and fabrication. The forward slant and consistent stroke weight emphasize momentum and clarity while preserving a distinctive, hard-edged voice.
Distinctive polygonal silhouettes are evident across both cases and numerals, with boxy bowls and segmented curves that keep a consistent visual logic. The sample text shows a lively, uneven edge texture that becomes part of the personality, especially on diagonals and at stroke endings.