Sans Faceted Jive 15 is a regular weight, very wide, monoline, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, logos, game ui, tech branding, futuristic, technical, industrial, arcade, sci‑fi, sci‑fi aesthetic, interface styling, geometric consistency, branding impact, angular, geometric, chamfered, faceted, modular.
A geometric sans built from straight strokes and clipped corners, with curves replaced by chamfered, multi-sided facets. Strokes are consistently even, creating a crisp, mechanical rhythm, while counters tend toward octagonal or rectangular forms (notably in O, Q, 0, and 8). Terminals are typically flat and squared-off, and the construction feels modular, as if drawn on a grid with repeated angles. The overall silhouette reads wide and stable, with clean spacing and an emphasis on sharp interior notches and cut-ins in letters like S, G, and R.
Best suited to display contexts where its angular construction can read clearly: headlines, titles, branding marks, packaging accents, esports or game UI, and sci‑fi themed interfaces. It can also work for short technical labels, signage, or product naming where a hard-edged, engineered feel is desired, but it’s less ideal for long-form reading.
The faceted geometry and hard cornering convey a futuristic, engineered tone—more console-interface than editorial. It suggests robotics, spacecraft labeling, and digital hardware aesthetics, with a confident, no-nonsense voice that feels fast and synthetic rather than humanist or friendly.
The design appears intended to translate a sleek, machine-made aesthetic into a highly consistent alphabet by substituting curves with planar facets and repeating chamfer angles across the set. The goal seems to be a strong futuristic voice with uniform stroke logic and distinctive, easily branded silhouettes.
Distinctive chamfers create strong letter separation at display sizes, but the frequent cut corners and tight apertures can make dense text feel busy at smaller sizes. Numerals echo the same angular logic, giving dashboards and numbering systems a consistent, techno-industrial character.