Sans Faceted Poha 10 is a regular weight, normal width, monoline, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: titles, logos, posters, game ui, album art, runic, angular, futuristic, mystical, aggressive, thematic display, inscriptional feel, symbolic texture, sci-fi edge, faceted, chiseled, spiky, geometric, high-contrast shapes.
A sharply angular, faceted display sans built from straight strokes and planar joins, with curves consistently replaced by wedges, diamonds, and pointed terminals. Strokes read as largely uniform in thickness, while the silhouette complexity varies per letter, creating a jagged rhythm across words. Counters are often triangular or diamond-like, and several glyphs use open forms and arrowhead-style diagonals that emphasize directionality. Overall spacing appears moderately loose in the sample text, helping the hard edges remain legible despite the highly stylized constructions.
Best suited to short, prominent settings where its faceted construction can function as a graphic element—titles, posters, logos, game/film branding, and UI or HUD-style headings. It can work for thematic packaging or event graphics that benefit from a sharp, coded, or ritualistic atmosphere, while longer paragraphs may read as intentionally decorative rather than neutral body text.
The font projects a runic, weapon-edged tone—part sci‑fi interface, part mythic inscription. Its sharp facets and arrowlike diagonals give it an energetic, combative presence, with an enigmatic, coded feel when set in longer lines.
The design appears intended to translate a runic/inscriptional aesthetic into a modern geometric display alphabet, prioritizing sharp planar facets and symbol-like silhouettes. It aims for immediate thematic signaling—mystery, fantasy, or sci‑fi—through consistent angular construction and aggressive terminals.
The most distinctive signature is the consistent substitution of round geometry with faceted polygons, producing diamond counters (notably in O-like forms) and hooked, blade-like terminals on diagonals. Uppercase and lowercase share the same angular logic, so mixed-case text maintains a cohesive, emblematic texture rather than a conventional text-face cadence.