Sans Faceted Ofvo 6 is a regular weight, normal width, monoline, upright, normal x-height, monospaced font visually similar to 'Libertad Mono' by ATK Studio (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: code, ui labels, terminal text, data tables, signage, technical, industrial, retro, utility, digital, grid fit, technical clarity, retro computing, industrial labeling, shape consistency, angular, faceted, chamfered, octagonal, geometric.
A faceted, geometric sans with chamfered corners and straight segments that replace curves with crisp planar cuts. Strokes stay even and sturdy, producing compact letterforms with squared shoulders, octagonal counters in round letters, and a consistent, grid-friendly rhythm across caps, lowercase, and figures. The lowercase is simple and constructed, with single-storey forms where expected and blocky terminals that keep the texture dense and highly regular.
Well-suited to contexts that benefit from rigid alignment and predictable spacing, such as code samples, terminal-style interfaces, tables, and technical readouts. It can also work effectively for short headlines, badges, and wayfinding where the angular silhouette and high regularity help characters stay distinct at small to medium sizes.
The overall tone feels technical and utilitarian, like labeling on equipment, instruments, or engineered systems. Its hard angles and steady spacing evoke retro digital and arcade-era aesthetics while still reading as clean and controlled rather than playful or ornamental.
The design appears intended to translate a rectilinear, machined look into a clear text face, using systematic chamfers to create personality without sacrificing consistency. It emphasizes repeatable geometry and robust, no-nonsense shapes for environments where precision and structure are part of the visual language.
Faceting is used consistently on corners and inner counters, giving the face a distinctive octagonal signature in letters like O/Q and in the numerals. The uniform advance and squared punctuation-like details (e.g., dots and small elements) reinforce a precise, mechanical cadence in running text.