Sans Faceted Kohy 4 is a regular weight, wide, monoline, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, logotypes, posters, gaming ui, sci-fi titles, techno, futuristic, industrial, arcade, mechanical, sci-fi styling, geometric rigor, display impact, systematic design, angular, chamfered, octagonal, geometric, modular.
A geometric sans built from straight strokes and pronounced chamfered corners, substituting curves with crisp planar facets. Forms favor octagonal and cut-corner construction (notably in O/0, C, G, and rounded lowercase), with consistent stroke thickness and tight, clean joins. Terminals are blunt and often angled, giving letters a machined, stencil-like precision without breaks. Proportions read on the wide side with generous horizontals and compact counters, while the lowercase keeps a straightforward, single-storey feel in characters like a and g.
Best suited to display applications where its angular construction can be appreciated: headlines, branding marks, packaging accents, event posters, and on-screen UI elements for games or tech products. It can also work for short blocks of text in larger sizes when a distinctive, engineered voice is desired.
The faceted geometry and hard corners create a distinctly futuristic, techno tone with an engineered, utilitarian edge. It evokes digital interfaces, sci‑fi labeling, and arcade-era display typography—confident, sharp, and purpose-built rather than friendly or calligraphic.
The font appears designed to translate a modular, cut-corner geometry into a readable sans, prioritizing a consistent faceted motif across caps, lowercase, and numerals. Its construction suggests an intention to feel machine-made and contemporary, delivering strong visual identity in titles and interface-style typography.
The design maintains a strong grid logic: many glyphs share repeated angles and corner cuts, which helps the alphabet feel cohesive in longer settings. Numerals mirror the same octagonal vocabulary, with especially graphic 2, 5, and 8 shapes that read well as display figures.