Sans Faceted Doko 5 is a very bold, wide, high contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, logos, packaging, gaming, industrial, aggressive, futuristic, tactical, mechanical, impact, edge emphasis, tech tone, brand marking, signage feel, angular, chamfered, blocky, geometric, octagonal.
A heavy, geometric display sans built from straight strokes and sharply chamfered corners, replacing curves with planar facets. Counters are mostly rectangular or polygonal, and terminals frequently end in diagonal cuts that create a crisp, mechanical rhythm. Strokes maintain a firm, monoline feel but pick up dramatic triangular notches and cut-ins that increase sparkle and edge definition, especially in diagonals and joins. Proportions are broad and sturdy, with compact apertures in letters like S and a, and tall, squared forms that keep the texture dense and emphatic in text.
Best suited for display settings where its angular facets and dense black shapes can read clearly: titles, posters, esports or gaming branding, tech/industrial product marks, and bold packaging callouts. It can also work for short UI labels or signage-style applications when a rugged, geometric voice is desired, but its distinctive cut-ins make it less appropriate for long-form small text.
The overall tone is hard-edged and engineered, with a decidedly industrial and tactical presence. Its faceted construction suggests machined metal, sci‑fi interfaces, or hazard signage, giving headlines an assertive, no-nonsense voice. The sharp chamfers and wedge-like cuts add urgency and impact, leaning toward action, gaming, and dystopian/tech aesthetics.
The design appears intended to translate a geometric sans into a faceted, machined aesthetic, using chamfers and wedge-shaped cutaways to imply speed, strength, and engineered precision. The consistent planar language across caps, lowercase, and figures suggests a deliberate focus on strong silhouettes and high-impact word shapes for branding and titling.
Distinctive cutaway details appear across many glyphs, creating a consistent “carved” motif that reads well at larger sizes and adds character even in short words. The numeral set is similarly angular and segmented, keeping the same octagonal logic and contributing to a cohesive, stencil-adjacent display texture without fully breaking strokes.