Sans Faceted Bejo 4 is a very bold, normal width, low contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, logos, packaging, sportswear, industrial, techno, aggressive, retro, impact, ruggedness, tech tone, signage, angular, geometric, blocky, chamfered, compact.
A heavy, geometric sans built from straight strokes and sharp chamfered corners, with faceted cuts substituting for curves throughout. Counters tend to be squared-off and relatively tight, producing dense, compact letterforms and a strong silhouette. Terminals are often beveled or diagonally clipped, and many joins are constructed from planar angles that create a crisp, machined rhythm. Proportions are sturdy with broad vertical stems, short apertures, and simplified construction that favors bold mass over internal openness.
Best suited to display sizes where its faceted construction and bold mass can read cleanly—headlines, posters, brand marks, apparel graphics, labels, and high-impact packaging. It can also work for short UI or signage-style callouts where a tough, technical voice is desired, while extended text is likely to feel heavy and compact.
The overall tone is hard-edged and mechanical, with a distinctly industrial, techno feel. Its faceted cuts and blocky forms read as assertive and rugged, suggesting utilitarian signage and retro-futuristic display styling rather than softness or elegance.
This design appears intended to deliver maximum impact through angular, machined geometry—capturing a retro-tech or industrial voice with strong silhouettes, clipped corners, and simplified counters for immediate recognition at a glance.
The sample text shows strong word-shape uniformity and a pronounced, poster-like presence, but the tight counters and angular apertures can make long passages feel dense. Numerals match the same clipped, geometric logic, reinforcing a consistent, engineered texture across mixed alphanumeric settings.