Sans Faceted Tyre 14 is a bold, normal width, low contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, logos, posters, game ui, packaging, industrial, techno, arcade, medieval, impact, geometry, machined feel, stylized legibility, angular, chamfered, geometric, blocky, octagonal.
A heavy, geometric sans built from straight strokes and chamfered corners, with curves consistently replaced by multi-sided facets. Counters tend toward octagonal or squared forms, and terminals are clipped to create a crisp, mechanical edge. The overall rhythm is compact and sturdy, with clear vertical emphasis and simple, monoline construction that keeps texture even in longer text. Distinctive notches and angled joins give many letters a sculpted, cut-metal feel while maintaining legibility at display sizes.
Best suited to display contexts where its faceted geometry can be appreciated: headlines, logos, posters, game or sci‑fi/fantasy UI titling, and packaging or label work that benefits from a rugged, engineered tone. It can work for short passages or pull quotes, but the dense, angular texture is most effective when used sparingly and at larger sizes.
The faceted construction and clipped terminals evoke a fabricated, machine-cut aesthetic that reads as techno and industrial, with a secondary association to arcade and fantasy/blackletter-adjacent signage due to the angular, emblem-like silhouettes. It feels assertive and stylized rather than neutral, projecting a crafted, hard-surface personality.
The design appears intended to translate a hard-edged, planar look into a readable sans, prioritizing impact and stylistic unity by replacing curves with consistent chamfers. It aims to deliver a distinctive, emblematic voice that suggests precision-cut materials and retro-futuristic or arcade-inspired display typography.
In the sample text, the dense stroke weight and frequent corner facets create strong word shapes and a pronounced, patterned texture. The design’s sharp angles are highly consistent across uppercase, lowercase, and numerals, reinforcing a cohesive “cut from planes” motif that stands out most in headings and short phrases.