Sans Faceted Jiro 6 is a regular weight, wide, low contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, branding, posters, gaming ui, sports graphics, tech, futuristic, industrial, sci-fi, sporty, interface feel, sci-fi styling, mechanical clarity, display impact, angular, chamfered, geometric, octagonal, monolinear.
A monolinear, angular sans with faceted construction: curves are consistently replaced by straight segments and chamfered corners, creating an octagonal, planed look throughout. Strokes maintain even thickness with clean terminals and a relatively open, wide stance, giving letters generous interior space. The rhythm is steady and mechanical, with squared bowls (O, C, D) and crisp joins; diagonals (A, V, W, Y) feel sturdy rather than sharp due to the uniform stroke and flattened vertices. Numerals follow the same faceted geometry, reading like simplified digital/industrial forms without becoming fully segmented.
Well suited for headlines, logos, and short-form messaging where the faceted geometry can be a defining visual hook. It also fits interface-style applications such as gaming overlays, dashboards, and tech product graphics, and can work in sports or industrial-themed branding. For longer text, it performs best when set with ample size and spacing so the corner facets stay clear.
The overall tone is precise and engineered, with a clear sci‑fi/tech attitude. Its faceted geometry suggests machinery, tactical interfaces, and synthetic materials, while the wide set adds a bold, display-forward presence. The feel is confident and modern, leaning toward utility and performance rather than warmth or tradition.
The design appears intended to translate a geometric sans into a faceted, planar system that evokes industrial fabrication and digital interfaces. By standardizing chamfered corners and squared curves across letters and figures, it aims for a cohesive, futuristic identity that remains legible while clearly stylized.
Uppercase forms are especially architectural, with prominent chamfers that keep counters from collapsing at corners. Lowercase maintains the same hard-edged language, producing a consistent texture in paragraph-like samples, though the faceting remains visually active. The design reads cleanly at larger sizes where the planar corner cuts are most apparent.