Sans Faceted Ebdi 6 is a very bold, normal width, medium contrast, italic, normal x-height font.
Keywords: sports branding, esports, posters, headlines, logos, sporty, aggressive, techno, futuristic, industrial, impact, speed, modernity, ruggedness, precision, angular, faceted, chiseled, slanted, compressed caps.
A sharply faceted sans with heavy, forward-leaning construction and planar cuts replacing most curves. Strokes are thick and decisive, with consistent oblique stress and frequent chamfered corners that create a carved, geometric rhythm. Counters tend toward squared/hexagonal shapes, and terminals are often clipped at angles, producing a compact, aerodynamic silhouette. Uppercase forms feel more rigid and blocklike, while lowercase maintains the same angular logic with simplified bowls and short, sturdy extenders; numerals match the same cut, mechanical geometry.
Best suited to display settings where impact and motion matter: sports identities, esports teams, action or sci-fi posters, energetic campaigns, and bold logo wordmarks. It can also work for UI or product labeling where a rugged, technical voice is desired, but it will be most effective at larger sizes where the faceted detailing reads clearly.
The overall tone is high-energy and assertive, reading as fast, tough, and performance-driven. Its sharp facets and slanted posture suggest speed, precision, and a slightly militaristic or industrial edge, aligning well with contemporary tech and action-oriented branding.
The font appears designed to deliver a fast, powerful display voice by combining a strong oblique stance with hard-edged, faceted geometry. Its consistent chamfers and polygonal counters aim to communicate modernity and toughness while preserving clear, repeatable letterforms for branding and titling.
The design leans on consistent corner chamfers and straight segments to keep texture even across words, with distinctive polygonal counters in letters like O/Q and similarly constructed digits. The italic slant is integral rather than a mild inclination, giving lines a continuous forward motion and a strong, headline-first presence.