Sans Faceted Yiso 5 is a very bold, very wide, medium contrast, italic, normal x-height font visually similar to 'Muller Next' by Fontfabric, 'Quarly' by Sentavio, and 'Heading Now' by Zetafonts (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: headlines, logos, posters, sports branding, gaming ui, futuristic, aggressive, industrial, sporty, techno, impact, speed, sci‑fi, performance, branding, angular, faceted, chamfered, blocky, compressed counters.
A sharply angular, faceted display sans with forward-leaning italic construction. Strokes are heavy and planar, with chamfered corners and clipped terminals replacing curves; even round forms (like O and 0) read as polygonal rings with small counters. The overall silhouette is wide and muscular, with compact apertures and tight internal spacing that creates dense, high-impact word shapes. Diagonals and stepped cuts introduce a mechanical rhythm, while the numerals echo the same wedge-like geometry for a consistent, engineered feel.
Best used at large sizes for headlines, branding, and title treatments where the faceted shapes can read clearly. It fits sports and motorsport identities, gaming and esports graphics, tech or sci‑fi packaging, and punchy UI labels where a fast, aggressive tone is desired.
The typeface projects speed and force, combining a racing italic slant with hard-edged, machined facets. Its tone feels futuristic and combative—suited to action, competition, and technology-forward aesthetics rather than quiet or traditional contexts.
The design appears intended to translate a sense of speed and manufactured precision into letterforms by using an italic stance and consistent planar cuts. It prioritizes impact and a cohesive, hard-edged texture over neutral readability, aiming for a modern display voice with an engineered, aerodynamic character.
Capitals and lowercase share a similarly robust, geometric voice, keeping the texture uniform across mixed-case settings. The faceting is consistent across the set, giving letters a sculpted, 3D-like presence even in flat black, while the compact counters suggest avoiding very small sizes where interior detail may close up.