Sans Faceted Mitu 4 is a regular weight, narrow, monoline, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: posters, headlines, logos, packaging, game titles, gothic, industrial, cryptic, authoritative, dramatic, display impact, modern gothic, geometric bite, brand voice, atmospheric titling, angular, faceted, chiseled, blackletter-leaning, condensed.
This typeface is built from straight strokes and crisp planar cuts that stand in for curves, producing a faceted, chiseled silhouette throughout. Terminals are sharply clipped with consistent angles, and counters tend to be narrow and rectilinear, giving letters a compact, vertical feel. The stroke weight stays largely even, with occasional pointed joins and notched corners that add texture without introducing true calligraphic modulation. Lowercase forms echo the same angular construction, keeping a disciplined rhythm and a tightly packed texture in words.
Best suited for display settings where its angular texture can be appreciated—posters, album/film/game titles, logos, and bold packaging or label work. It can also work for short bursts of UI or signage-style copy where a strict, stylized voice is desired, but it will feel dense in long passages.
The overall tone feels gothic-leaning and severe, with a hardened, architectural presence. Its sharp facets and tight spacing read as dramatic and slightly cryptic, evoking signage, metalwork, or ominous display titling rather than casual text.
The design appears intended to translate blackletter-like severity into a cleaner, more geometric construction, using faceted cuts to create a strong identity while staying structurally simple. Its goal is impact and atmosphere: compact word shapes, sharp terminals, and a consistent, engineered rhythm for modern display use.
Numerals and capitals maintain the same clipped-corner geometry, helping mixed-case settings feel cohesive. The repeated diagonal truncations create a recognizable pattern in running text, where the font’s character comes more from its corner language than from contrast.