Sans Faceted Ohgi 6 is a regular weight, normal width, high contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, branding, ui display, signage, tech, futuristic, industrial, modular, digital, geometric system, industrial feel, sci-fi display, curve reduction, sharp clarity, faceted, angular, octagonal, chamfered, geometric.
A sharp, faceted sans with corners cut into short planar bevels that replace most curves. Strokes are largely straight and vertical/horizontal, with occasional diagonals used for joins, producing an octagonal rhythm in rounds like C, O, and Q. Contrast is evident in the way vertical stems read heavier than many connecting horizontals, while counters stay open and squared-off. Proportions are compact and disciplined, with crisp terminals, tight apertures, and numerals built from the same chamfered geometry for a consistent, engineered texture.
Well-suited to headlines, titles, and short blocks of text where a crisp, technological character is desirable. It can work effectively for product branding, esports or tech-themed graphics, interface or display labeling, and directional/signage-style applications that benefit from its angular, cut-corner forms.
The overall tone feels technical and constructed, like lettering derived from machined parts or vector display systems. Its angular chamfers and squared counters evoke sci-fi interfaces, industrial labeling, and retro-digital aesthetics while still reading cleanly in text.
The design intent appears to be a modern geometric sans that substitutes curves with chamfered facets to create a precise, industrial look. The consistent planar cuts across letters and figures suggest a deliberate system for producing a distinctive sci-tech voice while keeping the alphabet cohesive in continuous text.
Diagonal strokes (A, K, V, W, X, Y) are simplified and straight, reinforcing the geometric logic, while round-derived letters keep a multi-faceted outline rather than true curves. The lowercase maintains the same hard-edged construction as the caps, giving mixed-case settings a uniform, system-like voice.