Sans Faceted Ipje 4 is a regular weight, wide, low contrast, italic, tall x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, logotypes, gaming ui, sports branding, futuristic, technical, sporty, assertive, mechanical, sci-fi branding, speed, tech aesthetic, angular clarity, display impact, angular, chamfered, geometric, polygonal, sharp terminals.
A slanted, geometric sans built from straight strokes and clipped corners, replacing most curves with faceted planes. Terminals are consistently angled, joins are crisp, and counters often take on polygonal shapes, producing a hard-edged, machined rhythm across words. Proportions feel expanded horizontally with a prominent x-height, while stroke weight stays even and clean, keeping texture steady in text despite the angular detailing. Figures and capitals echo the same chamfered construction for a cohesive, system-like look.
Well suited to sci‑fi and tech-oriented branding, esports or motorsport graphics, game UI headings, product packaging accents, and poster titles where a sharp geometric identity is desired. It can work for short text blocks or interfaces when sizes are generous, while the many facets and slant make it most convincing in display roles, signage, and titling rather than long-form reading.
This typeface projects a fast, technical energy with a distinctly engineered feel. Its sharp, chamfered turns and consistent forward slant create a sense of motion and purpose, reading as modern, synthetic, and slightly retro-futuristic. The overall tone is assertive and sporty rather than friendly or literary.
The design appears intended to deliver a futuristic, faceted voice that stays legible while emphasizing speed and geometry. By standardizing angled cuts and planar joins across letters and numerals, it aims for a cohesive, logo-ready texture that looks engineered rather than handwritten or calligraphic.
The facet logic is applied consistently to bowls and counters (notably in letters like O/Q and numerals), giving the font a strong modular system. The slanted stance and angled cross-strokes add a continuous forward momentum, and the punctuation and numerals match the same cut-corner vocabulary for stylistic unity.