Sans Faceted Urfy 3 is a bold, very wide, low contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, logos, game ui, tech branding, techno, industrial, futuristic, gaming, mechanical, sci‑fi styling, impact display, modular geometry, hard-surface look, angular, chamfered, blocky, geometric, octagonal.
A heavy, geometric sans built from straight strokes and chamfered corners, replacing curves with crisp facets. Forms skew wide with generous horizontal emphasis and squared counters, producing a compact, armored silhouette. Joins are clean and consistent, with diagonal cuts recurring at terminals and corners; bowls and rounds resolve into multi-sided shapes rather than true arcs. Spacing reads fairly even in text, while individual glyphs retain a modular, stencil-like rhythm through repeated angles and flat edges.
Best suited to display roles where its faceted construction can be read clearly: headlines, poster titling, esports or gaming identities, sci‑fi packaging, and tech-forward branding. It can also work for short UI labels or section headers when a hard-edged, engineered texture is desired, but the dense, angular detailing favors larger sizes over long-form reading.
The faceted geometry and clipped corners evoke a machine-made, sci‑fi tone—confident, assertive, and engineered. Its sharp planar detailing suggests speed, hardware, and synthetic environments, giving the voice a tactical, game-interface energy rather than a friendly or literary one.
The design appears aimed at delivering a bold, futuristic sans with a consistent system of chamfers and planar cuts, translating traditional grotesque skeletons into a hard-surface, polygonal aesthetic. The intent is likely to create high-impact lettering that feels technical and constructed, with strong recognizability across caps, lowercase, and numerals.
Uppercase construction is especially uniform and monoline in feel, while lowercase introduces distinctive, angular interpretations (notably in a, e, g, and y) that keep the texture lively. Numerals follow the same octagonal logic, with strong horizontals and corners that help them stand up in display settings.