Sans Faceted Miri 3 is a regular weight, normal width, medium contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, branding, logos, gaming ui, futuristic, industrial, techy, assertive, edgy, sci-fi styling, machined look, high impact, systematic geometry, angular, faceted, chamfered, geometric, sharp-cornered.
A sharply angular display sans built from planar facets and chamfered joins, with curves largely replaced by straight segments. Strokes are fairly even in thickness, but the cut corners and internal notches create a crisp, technical texture and a mildly modulated silhouette. Proportions stay compact and upright, with squared counters and strategic openings that keep forms legible despite the hard geometry. The overall rhythm feels engineered and grid-aware, with consistent corner treatments across capitals, lowercase, and numerals.
This font is best used for headlines, titles, and short bursts of text where its faceted personality can be appreciated. It suits branding for technology, esports, hardware, and entertainment, as well as UI labels in gaming or sci‑fi themed interfaces. For longer reading, it works more effectively in larger sizes with generous spacing.
The faceted construction gives a futuristic, industrial voice—confident, slightly aggressive, and distinctly “machine-made.” Its sharp edges and clipped terminals suggest speed, hardware, and sci‑fi interfaces rather than warmth or informality.
The design appears intended to translate a geometric, hard-surface aesthetic into a readable sans, using consistent chamfers and straight-line construction to evoke machined precision. It prioritizes a distinctive silhouette and thematic impact while maintaining recognizable letterforms through open counters and stable, upright proportions.
Lowercase mirrors the uppercase’s angular logic, producing a cohesive set that reads like a single system. Numerals follow the same chamfered patterning and look well-suited to on-screen labeling or scoreboard-like treatments. The dense black shapes and frequent diagonal cuts create strong contrast against light backgrounds, but the many sharp details can become visually busy at very small sizes.