Sans Faceted Vofe 6 is a very bold, very wide, low contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, logos, sportswear, packaging, industrial, retro, arcade, sporty, tough, impact, signage, branding, retro-tech, strength, angular, faceted, blocky, octagonal, stencil-like.
A heavy, block-constructed display face built from straight strokes and clipped corners, turning curves into planar facets. Counters tend to be polygonal (notably in O and o), and joins read as sharp, geometric cuts rather than smooth transitions. The letterforms are wide with compact apertures, producing a dense, billboard-like texture; diagonal letters (V, W, X, Y) emphasize broad wedges and strong symmetry. Lowercase follows the same hard-edged logic with sturdy, simplified forms and minimal curvature, while figures are equally chunky with angled terminals and consistent facet geometry.
Best suited to short, high-impact settings such as headlines, posters, identity marks, team branding, and packaging where strong silhouette and geometric bite are desirable. It works especially well when you want a rugged, industrial or retro-tech flavor in large sizes, on signage, merchandise, or title treatments.
The faceted construction and thick, cut-in shapes give the font an industrial, high-impact voice with a retro digital/arcade edge. It feels assertive and engineered—more about presence than refinement—suggesting competition, machinery, and bold signage. The overall tone is rugged and energetic, with a playful hint of 1980s display lettering.
The design appears intended to translate a geometric sans into a faceted, cut-corner aesthetic that maximizes impact and creates a memorable, emblem-like silhouette. By replacing curves with planar cuts and keeping strokes uniformly hefty, it aims for strong legibility at display sizes and a distinctive, engineered personality.
Spacing in the sample text reads tight and compact, which reinforces the solid, poster-like color. Distinctive octagonal counters and clipped terminals help maintain recognition at larger sizes, while the reduced apertures and dense rhythm can feel heavy in long passages. The exclamation point and punctuation match the same blunt, angular treatment for visual consistency.