Sans Faceted Wuja 3 is a very bold, wide, medium contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, logos, game ui, sports branding, industrial, techno, arcade, aggressive, futuristic, impact, machined look, retro tech, display legibility, systematic geometry, octagonal, angular, blocky, modular, stenciled.
A heavy, geometric display sans built from clipped corners and planar cuts that replace curves with straight segments. Bowls and terminals read as octagonal forms with consistent chamfering, producing a crisp, faceted silhouette throughout. Counters are compact and often rectangular, and several joins create small notches or cut-ins that suggest a lightly stenciled construction. The lowercase follows the same hard-edged logic with simplified, boxy shapes, and the numerals keep the same chamfered, mechanical geometry for a uniform overall texture.
Best suited to short, high-impact settings such as posters, titles, packaging callouts, and logo/wordmark work where the angular facets can read clearly. It also fits interface and on-screen display contexts that benefit from a techno or arcade tone, especially for labels, badges, and scoreboard-style typography.
The faceted construction and dense black shapes give the font a tough, machine-made voice that feels retro-digital and game-like. Its sharp angles and compact counters convey speed, impact, and an engineered aesthetic rather than warmth or elegance.
The design appears intended to deliver a bold, industrial display voice by translating traditional sans proportions into a faceted, chamfered system. Its consistent corner logic and notched joins suggest a goal of creating a distinctive, machined look that remains coherent across capitals, lowercase, and numerals.
At text sizes the tight counters and frequent corner cuts create a busy, high-contrast interior texture, while at larger sizes the distinctive chamfers and notches become a defining graphic motif. Overall rhythm is sturdy and assertive, with strong horizontal emphasis from flat terminals and squared-off forms.