Sans Faceted Kavy 5 is a bold, very wide, low contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: logos, headlines, posters, gaming, sports branding, futuristic, techno, industrial, sci-fi, assertive, high impact, tech aesthetic, industrial feel, brand stamp, display texture, angular, faceted, chiseled, octagonal, wide-set.
A heavy, geometric sans built from sharp planar cuts and chamfered corners, replacing curves with crisp facets. Strokes are consistently thick with minimal contrast, producing dense silhouettes and strong horizontal emphasis. Counters tend to be small and polygonal, and terminals frequently end in angled slices that create a machined, modular rhythm. The overall spacing and proportions read wide and stable, with a distinctly engineered, hard-edged texture in both caps and lowercase.
Best suited to logos, headlines, and display typography where its angular, machined texture can be a primary visual feature. It works well for gaming and sci-fi UI-style graphics, sports or automotive branding, packaging accents, and event posters. For long passages at small sizes, the tight, faceted counters and dense weight can reduce clarity, so larger settings or shorter blocks are more effective.
The faceted construction and broad stance give the font a futuristic, technical voice—more "equipment label" than conversational text. Its sharp angles and compact counters feel forceful and performance-oriented, evoking sci-fi interfaces, motorsport graphics, and industrial product aesthetics. The tone is confident and synthetic, with a deliberate, constructed personality.
The design appears intended to translate a technical, engineered aesthetic into a sturdy display sans by using faceted geometry and consistent stroke mass. Its wide proportions and repeated chamfers emphasize speed, precision, and a constructed, modular feel aimed at high-impact branding and interface-like treatments.
Round letters and digits are interpreted as octagonal forms, which keeps the design consistent but makes shapes like O/Q and some numerals feel especially emblematic. In running text the repeated angled cuts create a strong patterning effect, so the face reads best when its graphic texture is allowed to lead. The lowercase follows the same geometric logic as the caps, maintaining a uniform, mechanical feel rather than a calligraphic one.