Sans Faceted Doto 4 is a very bold, wide, medium contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: posters, headlines, logos, game ui, album covers, aggressive, futuristic, industrial, gothic, arcade, impact, distinctiveness, tech tone, graphic texture, branding, angular, faceted, chiseled, monolithic, sharp.
A heavy, angular display face built from straight strokes and planar cuts, replacing curves with crisp facets and beveled corners. Counters are small and often polygonal, giving rounded letters like O and Q an octagonal, cut-in look. Stems and arms keep a consistent, blocky weight with frequent diagonal terminals, producing a jagged silhouette and a compact, mechanical rhythm. Uppercase forms feel more uniform and monumental, while lowercase introduces more idiosyncratic shapes and tighter interior spaces; figures follow the same cut-corner construction for a cohesive set.
Best suited to short, prominent settings such as posters, headlines, logo wordmarks, game titles/UI labels, and album or event graphics where its angular texture can read cleanly. It can also work for signage or packaging accents when used large, with extra tracking to prevent counters from closing up.
The overall tone is forceful and high-impact, with a hard-edged, weaponized geometry that reads as techno-industrial and slightly blackletter-adjacent without using traditional serifs. Its sharp facets and condensed counters create a sense of urgency and intensity, suited to bold, confrontational messaging.
The design appears intended to deliver maximum impact through faceted geometry and a carved, stencil-like construction that suggests machining or armor plating. It prioritizes a distinctive silhouette and thematic texture over quiet readability, aiming for striking display use in tech, gaming, or heavy/industrial contexts.
The faceting creates pronounced interior notches and spikes, so clarity depends on generous size and spacing—especially in dense text. Diagonal terminals and abrupt joins add visual texture, and the numerals carry strong, emblem-like shapes that match the uppercase’s solidity.