Sans Faceted Bumo 6 is a very bold, normal width, low contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: logos, posters, headlines, game ui, album covers, industrial, aggressive, retro, game-like, edgy, high impact, stylized geometry, graphic texture, brand mark, angular, chiseled, geometric, diamond counters, stencil-like.
A heavy, angular display face built from straight strokes and sharp corner joins, with curves consistently replaced by planar facets. Many letters are constructed from wedge-like terminals and diamond-shaped or triangular counters, giving the forms a cut-out, modular feel. Strokes are broadly uniform and blocky, with crisp edges and compact internal spaces that tighten up as sizes get smaller. The set mixes wide and narrow silhouettes, creating a lively, uneven rhythm across words while keeping a consistent faceted geometry.
Best suited for short, high-impact text such as logos, headlines, posters, packaging, and title cards where the faceted shapes can read clearly. It can also work well for game interfaces, event promotions, and bold branding accents that benefit from a sharp geometric texture. Use with generous size and spacing when legibility is critical.
The overall tone is bold and hard-edged, suggesting machined signage, arcade/game UI, or stylized “metal” aesthetics without literal ornament. Its sharp facets and pointed joints create an assertive, energetic voice that reads as retro-tech and slightly menacing. The texture is punchy and graphic, prioritizing impact over softness.
The design appears intended to translate a carved, polygonal construction into a robust sans structure, trading curves for facets to create a distinctive graphic voice. Its consistent angular vocabulary and cut-out counters aim for immediate recognizability and strong silhouette performance in display settings.
Several glyphs emphasize internal diamond cutouts and triangular notches, which become key identifiers in running text. The lowercase maintains the same angular construction as the uppercase, so mixed-case setting stays cohesive but remains distinctly display-oriented. Tight counters and abrupt terminals can reduce clarity at very small sizes, while larger sizes showcase the faceting cleanly.