Sans Faceted Ofku 2 is a regular weight, normal width, monoline, upright, tall x-height, monospaced font.
Keywords: ui labels, console text, packaging, signage, technical documentation, technical, industrial, retro, utilitarian, mechanical, precision, legibility, modularity, systematization, durability, octagonal, angular, faceted, stencil-like, crisp.
This typeface is built from straight strokes and clipped corners, replacing curves with planar facets for an octagonal, engineered silhouette. Strokes stay consistent in thickness and maintain a crisp, hard-edged finish, with clear corner cuts showing up in round letters like O, C, and G as well as in numerals. The proportions are compact and efficient, with a large x-height and short extenders that keep lowercase forms dense and highly legible. Overall spacing and rhythm are uniform and grid-like, producing an orderly, machine-set texture in paragraphs and code-like strings.
It suits interfaces, dashboards, and system-style readouts where consistent character widths and strong differentiation help scanning. The angular construction also works well for industrial branding, product labels, packaging panels, and wayfinding or safety-style signage, especially at medium to large sizes where the faceting becomes a signature feature.
The tone feels technical and industrial, with a retro computing and lab-equipment character that reads as precise and no-nonsense. Its faceted geometry adds a rugged, hardware-forward edge, suggesting signage, instrumentation, and utilitarian labeling rather than soft editorial warmth.
The design appears intended to translate a modular, machined geometry into a practical text face, balancing strict construction with readable counters and a steady line of text. By standardizing widths and relying on chamfered corners, it aims to feel robust and precise while remaining serviceable in continuous reading.
Distinctive details include the consistently chamfered terminals, polygonal bowls, and simplified joins that keep complex letters (like M, W, and R) visually stable. Numerals echo the same clipped construction, and the overall design favors clarity and repeatable shapes over calligraphic variation.