Sans Faceted Myra 4 is a bold, wide, low contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, logos, gaming, sports, industrial, futuristic, game-like, mechanical, assertive, sci-fi tone, machined feel, high impact, geometric system, display clarity, angular, faceted, chamfered, octagonal, monolinear.
A heavy, monolinear display face built from straight strokes and crisp planar cuts, with curves consistently replaced by angled facets. Corners are aggressively chamfered, creating octagonal counters and terminals that feel machined rather than drawn. Proportions are relatively broad with sturdy verticals and tight interior apertures, producing a compact texture in words even at larger sizes. The rhythm is geometric and consistent, with sharp diagonals and abrupt joins that emphasize a hard-edged silhouette across both uppercase and lowercase.
Best suited for display applications such as headlines, posters, branding marks, game UI/title treatments, and sports or team-style graphics where angular impact is desired. It also works well for short technical labels or sci‑fi themed layouts that benefit from a machined, geometric voice, rather than long-form reading.
The overall tone is mechanical and futuristic, evoking engineered surfaces, sci‑fi interfaces, and arcade or console-era aesthetics. Its sharp facets and dense black shapes give it an assertive, high-impact voice that reads as technical and industrial rather than friendly or literary.
The design appears intended to translate geometric sans proportions into a faceted, cut-metal aesthetic, prioritizing strong silhouettes and a consistent planar construction. It aims for immediate recognizability and a high-impact texture in large text, using repeated chamfers and angular counters to create a coherent system across letters and numerals.
The faceting creates distinctive notches and angular counters that become a key identifying feature in running text; this also means small sizes can feel busy where apertures narrow. Numerals follow the same chiseled logic, making them visually consistent for display settings where a uniform, hard-edged system is desired.