Sans Faceted Urto 3 is a very bold, very wide, low contrast, upright, normal x-height font visually similar to 'Winner Sans' by sportsfonts (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: headlines, posters, game ui, sports branding, tech branding, techno, industrial, futuristic, arcade, aggressive, impact, futurism, machine aesthetic, signage, angular, chamfered, octagonal, blocky, compact.
A heavy, squared sans with hard planar cuts that replace curves with chamfered corners and faceted bowls. Strokes are consistently thick and blunt-ended, creating dense, solid letterforms with minimal internal counters. The geometry favors octagonal and trapezoidal shapes—seen in rounded letters like O/C/G and numerals—while diagonals (A, K, V, W, X, Y) are rendered as crisp, straight facets. Lowercase follows the same angular construction with simplified, sturdy forms and short ascenders/descenders, and punctuation details (like the i/j dots) are rendered as square blocks. Overall spacing and rhythm feel tight and muscular, with a distinctly mechanical silhouette.
Best suited to large-scale display settings where its faceted geometry can read clearly: headlines, posters, packaging callouts, esports/sports marks, and tech or industrial branding. It also works well for in-game titles and UI labels where a bold, engineered feel is desired.
The font reads as forceful and machine-made, with a sci‑fi/tech flavor driven by its faceted geometry and high visual mass. Its sharp corners and compact counters suggest speed, armor, and engineered hardware, lending an assertive, game-like tone to headlines.
The letterforms appear designed to deliver maximum impact with a hard-edged, machined aesthetic—using chamfers and planar cuts to evoke futuristic signage and industrial labeling while maintaining a consistent, logo-friendly structure across caps, lowercase, and figures.
The design’s flattened curves and clipped terminals create strong texture in blocks of text, but the small counters and dense shapes can make long passages feel heavy. Numerals are similarly faceted and sturdy, matching the caps’ industrial construction for cohesive display use.