Sans Faceted Firy 10 is a regular weight, normal width, monoline, italic, normal x-height, monospaced font.
Keywords: ui labels, wayfinding, posters, tech branding, gaming, technical, futuristic, industrial, tactical, retro-digital, constructed forms, machined look, interface tone, geometric consistency, faceted, chamfered, octagonal, angular, geometric.
This typeface is built from straight strokes and sharply clipped corners, replacing curves with consistent chamfers that create an octagonal, faceted silhouette across the alphabet and numerals. Strokes maintain an even thickness with a slight rightward slant, producing a crisp, engineered rhythm in text. Counters are generally open and polygonal, with squared terminals and systematic angle cuts that keep forms uniform from glyph to glyph. Numerals follow the same constructed logic, emphasizing straight segments and beveled joins for a cohesive set.
It performs well where a crisp, high-contrast silhouette and a technical voice are desirable—interface labels, HUD-style graphics, product markings, and game/film titling. The disciplined geometry also suits display-sized headlines and short blocks of text where the faceted construction can be appreciated.
The overall tone feels technical and utilitarian, like lettering intended for instruments, equipment labeling, or sci‑fi interfaces. The faceted geometry adds a rugged, tactical edge while retaining a clean, modern restraint.
The design appears intended to translate sans-serif forms into a faceted, chamfered system that reads as engineered and contemporary, maintaining consistent construction rules across letters and numbers for a unified, techno-industrial feel.
The consistent chamfer language is applied broadly, including in rounded archetypes like O, S, and 8, giving the font a distinctly machined personality. The slant adds motion without introducing cursive behavior, keeping the design firmly in a constructed, geometric mode.