Sans Faceted Geku 12 is a regular weight, very narrow, low contrast, italic, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, branding, sports, tech ui, techno, futuristic, industrial, sporty, angular, speed, precision, modernity, edgy display, engineered look, condensed, faceted, chiseled, octagonal, monolinear.
A condensed, right-leaning sans with faceted, planar construction that replaces curves with clipped corners and straight segments. Strokes are largely monolinear, with crisp terminals and a consistent diagonal slant that drives the rhythm across both cases. Counters tend to be narrow and vertically oriented, and many rounded forms (like C, O, G, and 0) read as octagonal or chamfered shapes rather than true ovals. The lowercase is compact and functional, with straightforward joins and minimal embellishment, keeping spacing tight and the overall texture brisk and mechanical.
This font is well suited to short, high-impact settings such as headlines, posters, wordmarks, and product branding where its faceted geometry can read clearly. It also fits sport and automotive-style graphics, as well as tech and interface display treatments where a sharp, engineered texture is desirable. For longer passages, it will work best with generous size and careful tracking to preserve legibility in the narrow counters.
The letterforms convey a technical, forward-leaning energy—more engineered than expressive—suggesting speed, precision, and a slightly retro-futurist edge. The faceted geometry adds a hardened, industrial tone that feels at home in performance-oriented and technology-adjacent contexts.
The design appears intended to deliver a streamlined, high-speed italic sans built from sharp facets, prioritizing a consistent geometric system over organic curves. Its condensed proportions and clipped construction aim to create a distinctive display voice that feels mechanical and performance-driven while staying clean and modern.
The design maintains a highly consistent chamfer logic across glyphs, which gives text a uniform, machined appearance. Diagonal strokes and angled terminals are prominent, and the numeral set follows the same clipped, polygonal vocabulary for a cohesive alphanumeric texture.