Sans Faceted Hukan 3 is a very light, normal width, monoline, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, logos, branding, packaging, futuristic, technical, geometric, digital, sci-fi, tech aesthetic, geometric system, modular forms, display impact, futurist tone, angular, faceted, chiseled, skeletal, crisp.
A sharply angular display sans built from straight, monoline strokes with frequent chamfered corners and polygonal substitutions for curves. Bowls and counters often resolve into hexagon- and octagon-like facets, giving rounded letters a cut, planar geometry. Proportions are clean and fairly open, with a mix of circularized geometric forms (notably in O/Q and numerals) alongside simpler linear constructions; joins stay crisp and terminals are blunt rather than tapered. Spacing and rhythm feel engineered and modular, with distinctive, schematic-looking curves rendered as short segments instead of continuous arcs.
Best suited to short, prominent settings where the faceted geometry can be appreciated—headlines, poster titles, logotypes, and brand marks for tech, games, or industrial themes. It can also work for UI headings or labels when a distinctly engineered voice is desired, while extended body text may feel busy due to the segmented curve construction.
The overall tone is cool, precise, and machine-made, evoking interfaces, instrumentation, and retro-futurist industrial design. Its faceted outlines read as crafted from metal or glass—more engineered than handwritten—creating a techno, sci‑fi flavor without becoming decorative in a calligraphic way.
The font appears designed to translate classic sans letterforms into a planar, polygonal system, replacing curves with crisp facets to project a constructed, high-tech identity. Consistent stroke weight and repeated chamfers suggest an intention toward modularity and a uniform, engineered rhythm across letters and figures.
The design leans on repeated angle motifs across the set, which strengthens cohesion and makes rounded characters immediately recognizable by their polygonal silhouettes. At smaller sizes the segmented curvature can visually simplify into a lightly pixel-like texture, while at larger sizes the faceting becomes the main character.