Sans Faceted Mife 9 is a bold, normal width, low contrast, upright, normal x-height font visually similar to 'EFCO Growers' by Ilham Herry and 'Sicret' by Mans Greback (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: headlines, posters, logotypes, game ui, sports branding, industrial, retro-tech, mechanical, arcade, utilitarian, impact, ruggedness, tech tone, display clarity, hard-edged, blocky, angular, octagonal, geometric, chiseled.
The design is built from straight strokes and clipped corners, replacing curves with angled facets that create an octagonal, chiseled silhouette. Strokes are consistently heavy with minimal contrast, and counters tend toward rectangular or polygonal shapes, producing a compact, blocky texture. The rhythm is slightly irregular due to varying letter widths, while the lowercase retains the same engineered geometry as the uppercase, keeping a unified, modular look.
It suits display use where a strong, angular personality is desirable: posters, album art, game UI, esports or tech branding, and packaging that benefits from a rugged, engineered flavor. It can also work for short navigational labels and titling systems where compact, high-contrast silhouettes help separation, though the dense, blocky texture is best kept to larger sizes and shorter text runs.
This typeface projects a tough, industrial tone with a distinctly retro-tech edge. The faceted construction and hard corners give it a mechanical, game-like energy that feels assertive and no-nonsense. Overall it reads as pragmatic and forceful rather than friendly or elegant.
The font appears designed to deliver high-impact headlines with a hard-edged, faceted voice. Its geometry prioritizes straight runs and crisp terminals to create a constructed, machined feeling, while keeping letterforms recognizable at a glance. The consistent, planar styling suggests an intention to evoke technical signage and retro digital aesthetics without resorting to rounded shapes.
Several forms use faceted outer corners and squared inner counters, creating a distinctive stencil-like solidity without actual breaks. Numerals and capitals share the same clipped geometry, helping mixed alphanumeric settings feel cohesive and uniform in tone.