Sans Faceted Wevy 4 is a very bold, very wide, medium contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, logos, posters, sportswear, packaging, industrial, athletic, futuristic, tough, arcade, impact, mechanical feel, retro tech, signage, branding, octagonal, chamfered, blocky, geometric, compact apertures.
A heavy, geometric sans built from straight strokes and clipped corners, replacing curves with crisp planar facets. Counters are tight and angular, with octagonal openings in letters like O/Q and a squared, machined feel throughout. The overall rhythm is dense and emphatic, with wide proportions and strong horizontal/vertical alignment; joins are abrupt and corners are consistently chamfered, giving the face a uniform, constructed texture in both uppercase and lowercase.
Best suited to short, high-impact settings such as headlines, branding marks, team or event graphics, labels, and poster typography where the faceted structure can read clearly. It also works well for display copy in tech, industrial, or game-adjacent themes, especially when ample tracking and contrast against the background help the tight counters stay legible.
The font reads as rugged and technical, evoking stenciled hardware markings, sports numerals, and retro arcade signage. Its sharp facets and dense massing lend an assertive, high-impact tone that feels energetic and no-nonsense rather than friendly or literary.
The design appears intended to translate a chiseled, machined aesthetic into a consistent alphabet, prioritizing bold presence and angular construction over softness or calligraphic nuance. The systematic chamfers and squared counters suggest a goal of creating a distinctive, emblematic display face that maintains a uniform, hard-edged silhouette across letters and numerals.
Lowercase forms largely echo the uppercase geometry, keeping a consistent modular voice; the single-storey a and g and the squared bowls reinforce the engineered look. Diagonals (K, V, W, X, Y) are handled with hard cuts rather than smooth transitions, and apertures tend to be narrow, which increases the punchy, compact color at text sizes.