Sans Faceted Lisy 15 is a regular weight, normal width, low contrast, upright, short x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, logos, gaming ui, tech branding, techy, futuristic, industrial, tactical, arcade, sci-fi styling, geometric system, display impact, ui clarity, industrial tone, octagonal, angular, chamfered, geometric, monolinear.
A geometric sans with sharply faceted, chamfered corners that replace curves with short planar cuts, giving many glyphs an octagonal, engineered silhouette. Strokes are predominantly monolinear with crisp terminals and squared joins, while counters stay fairly open and rectilinear. Proportions skew compact with a modest x-height and slightly extended ascenders/descenders, and the overall rhythm feels built from straight segments and consistent angles rather than optical rounding.
Best suited to display settings where the faceted geometry can read clearly—headlines, posters, branding marks, packaging, and interface/overlay typography for tech or gaming contexts. It can work for short blocks of text in larger sizes, but its sharp segmentation and compact lowercase favor titles, labels, and UI elements over long-form reading.
The faceted construction and hard edges create a distinctly technical, sci‑fi tone with an industrial, tool-like precision. It reads as purposeful and mechanical—more display-forward than conversational—evoking control panels, arcade UI, and angular 80s/90s digital aesthetics.
The design appears intended to translate a straight-edge, machined aesthetic into a coherent sans alphabet, prioritizing angular consistency and a futuristic presence. Its systemized chamfers and polygonal curves suggest an aim for strong identity in contemporary tech, sci‑fi, and game-adjacent visual languages.
Rounded forms like O/0 and C are rendered as multi-sided shapes, and diagonals (K, V, W, X, Y) are clean and assertive, reinforcing the geometric system. Numerals are similarly angular and legible, with a distinctive slashed zero that adds an instrument-like, utilitarian flavor.