Sans Faceted Fumu 3 is a regular weight, normal width, monoline, italic, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, logos, posters, packaging, game ui, techno, architectural, futuristic, industrial, angular, geometric styling, sci-fi voice, technical branding, angular system, faceted, chamfered, octagonal, geometric, crisp.
A geometric sans built from straight segments with frequent chamfered corners, replacing curves with small planar facets. Strokes are consistently even, with clean joins and an overall octagonal construction visible in rounds like O, C, and G, and in bowls such as B and P. The design maintains upright structure with a gentle rightward slant across both cases, and uses open counters and simplified terminals that keep forms crisp. Uppercase shapes feel compact and engineered, while lowercase echoes the same faceted logic in single-storey forms and angular shoulders, producing a cohesive, modular rhythm in text.
Well-suited to display settings where its faceted construction can be appreciated: headlines, posters, logos, and packaging that aim for a technical or futuristic feel. It can also work for on-screen UI titles, esports or gaming surfaces, and short informational labels where a crisp, engineered voice is desired.
The faceted geometry and slanted stance give the font a futuristic, technical tone—more “designed object” than handwritten or classical. It reads as precise and machine-minded, with an architectural sharpness that suggests sci‑fi interfaces, industrial labeling, and digital-era branding.
The design appears intended to translate a clean sans into a planar, chamfered system—capturing the feel of cut metal, vector geometry, or low‑poly forms while remaining readable in continuous text. The consistent slant and modular facets suggest a focus on creating a distinctive contemporary identity without relying on decoration beyond the construction itself.
The chamfers are applied consistently across diagonals, terminals, and inner corners, creating a distinctive sparkle at larger sizes while keeping letterforms legible in longer lines. Numerals follow the same angular logic, with polygonal rounds and straightforward, sign-like construction.