Sans Faceted Abmuz 9 is a very bold, normal width, low contrast, upright, tall x-height font visually similar to 'Outlast' by BoxTube Labs and 'Neuron Angled' by Corradine Fonts (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: headlines, posters, sports branding, packaging, signage, industrial, athletic, futuristic, utilitarian, tough, impact, ruggedness, tech tone, branding cohesion, label clarity, chamfered, octagonal, angular, blocky, compact.
A heavy, geometric sans with chamfered corners and faceted construction that turns curves into crisp planes. Strokes are consistently thick with squared terminals, producing a dense, poster-ready texture and strong vertical presence. Counters skew toward octagonal/rectilinear shapes, and many joins are cut with short diagonals that create a machined, stencil-like feel without actual breaks. The lowercase follows the same blocky logic, with single-storey a and g, squared shoulders, and compact apertures; numerals are similarly faceted with robust, straight-sided forms.
Best suited to display settings such as headlines, posters, sports and team graphics, packaging, and strong wayfinding or signage where a compact, high-impact silhouette is desirable. It also fits interface titles and game/tech graphics that benefit from an engineered, angular look.
The overall tone is tough and functional, evoking industrial labeling, sports numbering, and game UI typography. Its sharp facets and compact forms read as modern and engineered, leaning toward a bold, assertive voice rather than a friendly one.
The design appears intended to translate a sturdy, machine-cut aesthetic into a clean sans framework, using faceted corners to deliver impact while maintaining simple, highly legible silhouettes. The consistent chamfer logic suggests an emphasis on branding cohesion across letters and numerals.
The faceting is applied consistently across rounds and diagonals, giving the font a cohesive octagonal rhythm. In longer text, the dense black shapes and tight apertures favor short bursts—headlines, labels, and impact lines—over continuous reading at small sizes.