Sans Faceted Razo 1 is a regular weight, wide, monoline, upright, short x-height font.
Keywords: posters, titles, logos, game ui, album covers, futuristic, angular, tech, runic, stealthy, sci-fi display, coded aesthetic, geometric branding, game titling, symbolic impact, geometric, faceted, sharp, modular, high-contrast.
A sharp, faceted display sans built from straight strokes and triangular cuts, replacing curves with planar angles and chamfered corners. Stems are consistently thick with crisp terminals, while counters often become diamond- or wedge-shaped apertures, giving the alphabet a carved, stenciled feel without actual breaks in the strokes. Proportions skew wide with a low x-height and a strong cap presence; diagonals and acute joins dominate, creating a rhythmic zig-zag texture across words. The set maintains a coherent geometry across uppercase, lowercase, and numerals, with simplified, emblem-like forms that prioritize silhouette over conventional reading cues.
Best suited to short bursts of text where its geometric texture can do the heavy lifting: posters, title treatments, branding marks, game/UI headings, and entertainment graphics. It can also work for labels and packaging where a high-tech or clandestine mood is desired, especially at larger sizes where the faceted details stay clear.
The overall tone reads futuristic and coded, with an edge of sci‑fi interface lettering and mythic/arcane “rune” energy. Its aggressive angles and hard facets suggest precision, machinery, and stealth, making the text feel like it belongs to a game UI, a tech faction insignia, or a cyberpunk title card.
The design appears intended to translate a conventional sans skeleton into a sharply faceted, emblematic system that feels engineered rather than written. By enforcing straight segments, pointed joins, and diamond counters, it aims to deliver maximum stylistic identity and a futuristic, coded atmosphere while remaining structurally consistent across the character set.
In continuous text the repeated diagonals and notched joins create a strong patterning effect; distinctive shapes in letters like A, S, and Z contribute to the font’s signature look but also heighten the “cipher” impression. Numerals and punctuation follow the same angular system, reinforcing a consistent, symbol-set aesthetic.