Sans Faceted Uksu 2 is a very bold, normal width, monoline, upright, normal x-height font visually similar to 'Manufaktur' by Great Scott (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: headlines, logos, gaming, posters, ui display, tech, futuristic, arcade, robotic, industrial, impact, sci-fi branding, modular geometry, interface feel, rounded corners, square forms, ink-trap cuts, stencil-like, geometric.
A heavy, geometric sans built from squared, modular forms with softly rounded outer corners and crisp, planar cut-ins that replace many curves. Strokes stay consistently thick, while counters are compact and often rectangular, producing a dense, high-contrast-in-negative-space look. Many joins and terminals use angled notches and inset corners, creating a faceted, almost stencil-like construction that keeps shapes open and distinct. Overall spacing and rhythm feel engineered and grid-friendly, with simplified, blocky silhouettes that remain legible at larger sizes.
Best suited to display settings where its bold, modular shapes can read cleanly—headlines, logos, packaging, posters, game titles, and tech-themed UI labels. It performs particularly well when you want a strong, futuristic voice and clear silhouette recognition at medium-to-large sizes.
The typeface projects a bold, tech-forward attitude with a playful arcade/console flavor. Its chiseled corner cuts and compact interiors evoke machinery, sci‑fi interfaces, and product branding that wants to feel robust and engineered. The tone is confident and attention-grabbing rather than subtle or literary.
The design appears intended to combine a sturdy geometric skeleton with faceted corner reliefs to create a distinctive, machine-made look. By trading smooth curves for planar cuts and compact counters, it aims for immediate impact and a recognizable, tech-branded personality.
The faceted cuts act like functional ink-traps or relief notches, adding visual texture and helping define letters that might otherwise be purely rectangular. Rounded exterior corners soften the mass and prevent the design from feeling overly harsh, while the rectangular counters and squared curves reinforce a utilitarian, digital sensibility.