Sans Faceted Posa 11 is a light, normal width, low contrast, upright, short x-height font.
Keywords: fantasy titles, game ui, posters, logos, packaging, runic, angular, hand-hewn, mythic, enigmatic, inscriptional feel, fantasy tone, symbolic voice, display impact, faceted, chiseled, spiky, irregular, monoline.
This typeface is built from sharp, planar strokes that substitute facets for curves, producing a distinctly angular, chiseled silhouette. Strokes are largely monoline, with hard corners, triangular joins, and occasional wedge-like terminals; counters often resolve into diamonds or polygons rather than rounded bowls. Proportions feel compact and slightly uneven in a deliberate way, with narrow apertures and a lively, hand-drawn rhythm that varies subtly from glyph to glyph. Capitals read tall and pointed, while lowercase forms keep a small, tight body with simplified constructions and short extenders, reinforcing a compact texture in text.
Best suited to display settings where its angular personality can read clearly—fantasy or adventure titles, game branding and UI accents, posters, album art, and logo wordmarks. It can also add a thematic, carved-in-stone flavor to packaging or event graphics, especially at medium to large sizes with generous spacing.
The overall tone is rune-like and archaic, evoking carved inscriptions, fantasy worldbuilding, and coded messages. Its sharp geometry and irregular cadence give it an energetic, slightly menacing edge while still feeling playful and illustrative.
The design appears intended to reinterpret a sans framework through faceted, carved geometry, prioritizing character and atmosphere over neutral readability. Its consistent planar construction suggests a goal of creating an inscriptional, rune-adjacent voice that remains coherent across caps, lowercase, and figures.
Numerals and punctuation follow the same faceted logic, with angular diagonals and polygonal bowls that maintain stylistic unity. The face is most recognizable through its distinctive cornering and diamond-shaped counters, which can become visually dense when set tightly.