Sans Faceted Potu 1 is a regular weight, normal width, monoline, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: logos, posters, game ui, album covers, headlines, runic, edgy, enigmatic, techy, angular, thematic display, coded aesthetic, carved look, futuristic edge, triangular, faceted, sharp, geometric, chiseled.
A sharply faceted, geometric sans built from straight strokes and triangular joins, with curves consistently replaced by angled planes. Stems and diagonals keep a steady stroke thickness, while terminals finish in crisp points or flat-cut ends, creating a chiseled silhouette. Counters tend toward diamonds and wedges, and the overall rhythm is lively due to varied letter widths and frequent acute angles. The lowercase mirrors the uppercase’s constructed logic, with simplified forms and pointed details that keep the texture distinctly jagged and high-contrast in shape (not weight).
Best suited for display applications where distinctive character matters: logos and wordmarks, posters, game titles and UI accents, album/track artwork, packaging, and event graphics. It also works well for short pull quotes or headings where its angular rhythm can be appreciated without demanding extended reading.
The font projects a runic, coded quality with a futuristic edge—part carved inscription, part arcade/console styling. Its spiky geometry reads as assertive and mysterious, lending a sense of ritual, fantasy, or techno-thriller intrigue. The overall tone is bold and expressive rather than neutral or bookish.
The design appears intended to translate a runic/inscribed aesthetic into a clean, systematic Latin alphabet, using planar facets and pointed terminals to create a memorable, symbol-like texture. Its construction emphasizes identity and atmosphere over neutral readability, making it ideal as a themed display face.
At text sizes the angular apertures and stylized letterforms can reduce quick legibility, especially in dense paragraphs, but they create strong visual identity in short bursts. The design’s consistent faceting across capitals, lowercase, and numerals helps maintain a cohesive “cut from the same material” feel.