Sans Faceted Idkab 9 is a very light, normal width, monoline, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: logotypes, headlines, posters, game ui, album art, futuristic, runic, angular, geometric, edgy, symbolic feel, sci-fi tone, geometric consistency, display impact, faceted, linear, pointed, wireframe, minimalist.
This font is constructed from thin, uniform strokes with an emphatically angular, faceted geometry. Curves are largely replaced by straight segments, producing triangular counters, diamond-like bowls, and wedge terminals throughout. Diagonals dominate the rhythm, with many glyphs built from open shapes and sharp internal angles; rounded forms like O read as rotated squares. Spacing and letterfit feel moderately open, and the overall texture stays light and airy despite the high-contrast zigzag shapes in several characters.
Best suited to display contexts where the angular styling can be read at larger sizes: logos, titles, posters, game or film graphics, and short bursts of text on packaging or album covers. It can also work for UI headings or labels when a futuristic or coded aesthetic is desired, but the thin strokes and unconventional shapes suggest avoiding long-form body text.
The letterforms evoke a techno-ritual mood—part sci‑fi interface, part runic inscription. Its sharp planar construction reads as cold, precise, and slightly cryptic, giving text an encoded, emblematic feel rather than a conventional typographic voice.
The design appears intended to translate a Latin character set into a faceted, symbol-like system while staying legible through consistent proportions and repeated geometric motifs. By favoring straight segments, sharp vertices, and diamond/triangle structures, it aims to deliver a distinctive sci‑fi/runic identity for branding and display typography.
Distinctive zigzag constructions appear in several letters (notably forms like S and E), while many lowercase characters retain the same angular vocabulary rather than adopting fully traditional cursive structures. The punctuation and small details (like i/j dots) remain minimal and geometric, helping the design keep a consistent, schematic tone across mixed-case setting.