Sans Faceted Omge 4 is a regular weight, normal width, low contrast, upright, normal x-height, monospaced font.
Keywords: code, terminal ui, data tables, labels, signage, technical, utilitarian, industrial, retro, mechanical, systematic design, grid alignment, technical readability, geometric character, angular, chamfered, octagonal, geometric, crisp.
A geometric sans with consistently straight strokes and chamfered corners that replace curves with planar facets. The forms read as slightly octagonal in rounded letters and numerals, with uniform stroke thickness and squared terminals. Proportions are compact and disciplined, with a steady, even rhythm typical of fixed-width construction; counters are clean and open, and diagonals are crisp without decorative modulation.
Works well in code editors, terminal-like interfaces, and tabular settings where fixed-width alignment is useful. The sharp, cut-corner shapes also suit UI labels, technical documentation, packaging callouts, and signage that benefits from a crisp, engineered look.
The faceted geometry gives a technical, engineered tone—practical and no-nonsense, with a subtle retro digital flavor. It feels suited to systems and tools where clarity and structure matter more than softness or expression.
Likely designed to bring a faceted, CAD-like geometry to a monospaced sans, maintaining strict consistency across glyphs while adding character through chamfered corners. The goal appears to be a clear, systematic texture that remains legible while feeling distinctly mechanical.
Distinctive chamfers appear throughout (including in round characters and figures), creating a consistent ‘cut-corner’ motif. Numerals follow the same angular logic, and the overall spacing stays orderly, reinforcing a schematic, grid-aligned impression.