Sans Faceted Kafa 2 is a bold, very wide, low contrast, upright, tall x-height font.
Keywords: branding, headlines, posters, gaming ui, tech packaging, futuristic, techy, industrial, sci‑fi, mechanical, tech aesthetic, geometric system, display impact, ui flavor, angular, faceted, octagonal, geometric, squared counters.
A geometric sans built from straight strokes and clipped corners, replacing curves with crisp planar facets. Bowls and counters read as squared or octagonal forms, with frequent chamfered terminals and a generally horizontal, engineered rhythm. The lowercase maintains a tall x-height and compact apertures, while round characters like O/Q and C/G resolve into multi-sided outlines; numerals follow the same faceted logic with broad, stable silhouettes. Overall spacing and letterfit feel deliberate and slightly extended, emphasizing a strong, modular presence in text.
Well suited to logos, headlines, and poster typography where a sharp, high-tech personality is desired. It also fits interface-style graphics, gaming/stream overlays, and product or packaging design for electronics and industrial themes, especially when set with generous tracking or at larger sizes to highlight the faceted detailing.
The faceted construction and hard angles convey a futuristic, utilitarian tone—more machine-made than handwritten. It suggests technology, hardware interfaces, and sci‑fi worldbuilding, with an assertive, performance-oriented voice that reads confident and engineered.
The letterforms appear designed to translate a techno-industrial aesthetic into a consistent sans system by standardizing curves into chamfered geometry. The goal seems to be strong visual impact and a cohesive sci‑fi/engineering voice across both text samples and alphanumeric sets.
Because many interior spaces are squared and apertures are tight, the design favors clean reproduction and clear edge definition; it tends to look most characteristic at display sizes where the chamfers and geometric cuts are easily perceived. The distinctive notches and corner cuts create a consistent signature across uppercase, lowercase, and figures.