Sans Faceted Kaso 16 is a bold, very wide, monoline, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, logotypes, ui labels, gaming, tech branding, futuristic, techy, industrial, space-age, sporty, sci-fi styling, interface clarity, brand distinctiveness, geometric consistency, display impact, rounded corners, soft square, geometric, streamlined, modular.
A geometric sans built from uniform stroke widths and soft-square forms, with corners consistently rounded and curves simplified into straight-ish segments. Counters tend toward rectangular and capsule shapes, and many letters show open apertures and cut-ins that create a crisp, engineered rhythm. The proportions run broad with generous horizontal spans, while verticals stay clean and steady; diagonal strokes are used sparingly but decisively in letters like K, V, W, X, and Y. Overall spacing reads even and controlled, producing a smooth texture in longer lines despite the strongly stylized construction.
Best suited to display roles where its wide stance and stylized geometry can read clearly: headlines, logos, product marks, packaging for tech or sports-oriented goods, and UI/UX labels in dashboards or game interfaces. It can also work for short blocks of copy or captions when ample size and spacing are available, but the distinctive letterforms make it most effective as an attention-getting face.
The design projects a sleek, futuristic tone—more cockpit display than book page. Its softened corners keep it approachable, while the squared geometry and clipped joins add an assertive, technical character that feels ready for interfaces, hardware, or sci‑fi branding.
The letterforms appear designed to translate a modern, engineered aesthetic into a clean sans structure—prioritizing consistent stroke logic, compact curvature, and squared counters for a controlled, futuristic look. The aim seems to be strong recognizability and a cohesive sci‑tech voice across both text and numerals.
Several glyphs emphasize continuity and flow through rounded terminals and inset joins, giving the alphabet a cohesive “milled” or “molded” feel. Numerals follow the same soft-rectangular logic, helping mixed alphanumeric settings look consistent in UI-like contexts.