Sans Faceted Nidu 1 is a bold, normal width, medium contrast, upright, normal x-height font visually similar to 'Gemsbuck Pro' by Studio Fat Cat (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: headlines, posters, sports branding, packaging, signage, industrial, sporty, assertive, technical, retro, impact, ruggedness, team style, industrial feel, faceted, octagonal, chamfered, angular, blocky.
A heavy, geometric sans with curves consistently replaced by chamfered, multi-faceted joins, producing an octagonal silhouette across bowls and counters. Strokes are largely uniform, with flat terminals and crisp corners that create a sturdy, built-from-planes feel. Proportions are compact and square-leaning in many capitals, while the lowercase maintains a practical, workmanlike structure with a single-storey a and g and minimal modulation. Numerals echo the same cut-corner logic, reading like signage forms with strong edges and stable, rectangular rhythm.
Best suited to display typography where the faceted construction can be clearly seen: headlines, posters, sports or team-style branding, product packaging, and wayfinding or industrial signage. It can work for short paragraphs in larger sizes when a strong, engineered voice is desired, but its angular detailing is likely most effective for titles, labels, and callouts.
The overall tone is tough and utilitarian, suggesting machinery, uniforms, and no-nonsense labeling. Its faceted geometry adds a retro-sport and arcade-adjacent flavor, while the solid mass and sharp detailing keep it firmly in an assertive, technical register.
The design appears intended to translate the visual language of cut metal, routed plastic, or stencil-like industrial forms into a clean, modern sans. By standardizing chamfers instead of true curves, it aims for high-impact readability and a distinctive, rugged geometric identity.
The repeated corner cuts create distinctive internal shapes in letters like O, Q, and S, which helps brand recognition but can also introduce visual busyness at smaller sizes. Spacing appears straightforward and even, supporting short bursts of text, while the sharp facets are most rewarding in larger display settings.