Sans Faceted Humeb 7 is a light, wide, monoline, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: posters, logotypes, title cards, game ui, sci‑fi branding, futuristic, runic, geometric, techno, game-like, sci‑fi styling, display impact, geometric system, cipher aesthetic, brand distinctiveness, angular, chiseled, triangular, hard-edged, schematic.
A sharply geometric, monoline sans built from straight strokes, acute angles, and triangular wedge terminals, with curves largely replaced by faceted arcs. Proportions feel open and slightly expanded, with generous counters in letters like O and diamond-like constructions appearing in several round forms. Crossbars and horizontals are often shortened or offset, and joins tend to be pointed rather than rounded, giving many glyphs an arrowhead or cut-metal silhouette. Numerals and punctuation echo the same angular logic, maintaining consistent stroke weight and a crisp, planar rhythm across text.
Works well for display applications where a faceted, techno voice is desired—posters, album or event titles, game and streaming overlays, and sci‑fi themed branding. It can also serve for short UI labels or headings when the goal is a distinctive, encoded look rather than maximum readability at small sizes.
The overall tone reads futuristic and cipher-like, evoking sci‑fi interfaces, arcade/game UI, and stylized “rune” lettering without becoming ornamental. Its sharp geometry and unconventional constructions create a sense of motion and edge, more expressive than neutral, and best suited to attention-grabbing settings.
The design appears intended to translate a minimalist sans into a faceted, wedge-driven system, emphasizing angular construction and a cohesive sci‑fi aesthetic. It prioritizes a strong visual signature and geometric consistency across capitals, lowercase, and numerals.
In continuous text, the distinctive alternation of long verticals and short, slanted segments produces a staccato texture with strong diagonals. Several glyphs use open or asymmetrical structures, so word shapes feel highly stylized and slightly enigmatic, prioritizing character over conventional familiarity.