Sans Faceted Wuby 2 is a very bold, very wide, medium contrast, upright, tall x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, logos, sports branding, game ui, industrial, techno, arcade, sporty, mechanical, impact, futurism, machined feel, branding, octagonal, beveled, angular, blocky, stencil-like.
A heavy, geometric sans built from planar, chamfered strokes that replace curves with crisp facets. Letterforms are compactly constructed with squared counters and clipped corners, producing an octagonal rhythm across rounds like O, C, and G. Terminals are blunt and consistently angled, with minimal stroke modulation and a strongly modular feel. Lowercase follows the same blocky logic with a tall x-height and simplified bowls and shoulders, while numerals echo the same cut-corner geometry for a uniform, sign-like texture.
Best suited to short, high-impact settings such as headlines, posters, packaging callouts, and wordmarks where the faceted silhouettes can do the work. It also fits sports or esports branding, event graphics, and game/interface titles that benefit from a mechanical, angular texture. For longer copy, larger sizes and ample tracking help preserve the clarity of its squared counters.
The faceted construction and hard edges give the typeface a rugged, engineered tone that reads as futuristic and game-adjacent. Its dense black mass and sharp corners convey strength and urgency, suggesting speed, competition, and industrial hardware aesthetics.
The design appears intended to translate a bold sans structure into a sharp, machined look by systematically chamfering corners and simplifying curves into straight planes. The consistent faceting across letters and numbers suggests a focus on strong silhouettes and a unified display palette for branding and attention-grabbing typography.
At display sizes the angular counters and notch-like cuts create distinctive silhouettes, but the tight internal spaces and square apertures can close up visually in small text or on low-resolution outputs. The overall spacing feels generous enough for headlines, while the geometry remains consistent across upper/lowercase and figures, supporting a cohesive, logo-ready voice.