Sans Faceted Sysi 7 is a very bold, wide, monoline, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, logotypes, sports branding, game ui, industrial, futuristic, arcade, athletic, tactical, impact, geometric styling, tech aesthetic, signage clarity, branding voice, octagonal, chamfered, blocky, stencil-like, angular.
A heavy, block-constructed sans with crisp chamfered corners and faceted cuts replacing curves. Strokes are uniform and planar, producing polygonal bowls and counters (notably in O, Q, 0, 8) and a square, compact rhythm across the alphabet. Terminals are clipped at consistent angles, and internal counters are simplified into rectangular or octagonal openings that keep forms sturdy at display sizes. Spacing reads fairly open for such dense shapes, supporting all-caps settings and short words with a strong, mechanical texture.
Best suited to display typography where its angular facets and dense black shapes can read cleanly—headlines, posters, packaging callouts, team or event branding, and game/tech interfaces. It also performs well for bold labels, badges, and numbering systems where quick recognition and visual punch matter more than long-form readability.
The overall tone is assertive and engineered, with a retro-tech flavor reminiscent of arcade UI, sports numbering, and military/industrial labeling. The faceted geometry gives it a hard-edged, no-nonsense voice—confident, high-impact, and slightly game-like.
The design appears intended to translate an octagonal, machined geometry into a practical all-purpose display sans, trading curves for consistent chamfers to achieve a rugged, futuristic look. It aims for high impact and clear silhouettes that hold up in large sizes and high-contrast applications.
Diagonal strokes (V, W, X, Y, K) are handled with straight planar joins that keep the silhouette crisp, while letters like S and G rely on stepped facets rather than smooth curvature. The lowercase echoes the uppercase construction closely, emphasizing consistency over calligraphic contrast and making mixed-case text feel strongly branded.