Sans Faceted Orlu 5 is a regular weight, normal width, low contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, logos, posters, gaming, ui, techno, industrial, futuristic, tactical, arcade, sci-fi styling, geometric clarity, display impact, system labeling, angular, chamfered, faceted, monoline, octagonal.
A sharply faceted sans with monoline strokes and consistent chamfered corners that replace curves with short planar cuts. Counters and bowls tend toward octagonal/rectilinear shapes, giving letters like O, Q, and e a crisp, engineered geometry. Terminals are clean and blunt, diagonals are straight and taut, and the overall construction favors compact, modular forms with slightly squarish proportions.
Best suited for short to medium-length display settings where the angular detailing can read clearly: headlines, branding marks, packaging callouts, game titles, and tech-forward UI/overlay text. It also works well for numeric-heavy elements such as scoreboards, labels, and interface counters where the faceted forms reinforce a structured, digital aesthetic.
The overall tone is technical and synthetic, with a hard-edged, machine-made feel. Its faceted curves and cut-corner detailing evoke sci‑fi interfaces, arcade hardware, and industrial labeling, projecting precision and controlled energy rather than warmth or softness.
Likely intended to translate a futuristic, polygonal construction into a practical, legible sans by standardizing stroke weight and repeating a consistent chamfer language. The focus appears to be on creating a distinctive geometric voice that still behaves predictably across an alphabet and numeral set.
The design keeps a steady rhythm through repeated corner angles and uniform stroke weight, which helps maintain coherence across caps, lowercase, and numerals. The lowercase retains the same angular logic as the capitals, emphasizing a geometric, constructed voice rather than traditional handwritten or humanist cues.