Sans Faceted Kovo 2 is a bold, wide, low contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: posters, headlines, logos, game ui, album art, futuristic, aggressive, gaming, industrial, metallic, impact, futurism, edginess, sci-fi feel, display emphasis, angular, faceted, geometric, sharp, techno.
A sharply faceted display sans built from straight strokes and planar cuts, with corners resolved into pointed terminals and triangular notches instead of curves. Stems are heavy and uniform, producing a dense silhouette; counters are mostly angular, often appearing as small wedge-shaped openings within larger black forms. Diagonals are prominent and consistently chamfered, giving letters a cut-metal rhythm, while horizontals are broad and flat to reinforce a stable, blocky top line. Overall widths vary by glyph, but the set maintains a coherent, hard-edged geometry and a tight, compact interior spacing that reads best when given generous tracking.
Best suited for headlines, posters, esports and game branding, UI labels, and logo/wordmark work where its angular silhouettes can be appreciated. It also performs well for album or event titling and other high-contrast graphic layouts, but is less ideal for long-form reading due to its tight counters and highly stylized interiors.
The font conveys a high-impact, mechanical attitude—more like armor plating than handwriting—suggesting speed, intensity, and a slightly combative energy. Its pointed facets and gated counters evoke sci‑fi interfaces, arcade aesthetics, and heavy-music titling, creating a tone that feels synthetic, assertive, and dramatic.
The design appears intended as a statement display face that replaces curves with crisp facets to create a cut, engineered look. Its consistent chisel-like terminals and wedge counters aim to deliver a strong, futuristic voice with immediate visual punch in branding and titling contexts.
Legibility is driven by silhouette more than inner detail; several characters rely on small internal wedges and tight counters that can visually fill in at small sizes or in dense paragraphs. The numerals and capitals share the same blade-like construction, keeping the texture consistent across alphanumerics and making the face especially effective in short, bold statements.