Sans Faceted Nidu 3 is a very bold, narrow, medium contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, logos, packaging, signage, industrial, tech, aggressive, sporty, military, impact, ruggedness, precision, modernity, distinctiveness, angular, faceted, octagonal, blocky, condensed.
A compact, all-caps-forward display sans built from sharp, planar facets rather than smooth curves. Strokes are heavy and predominantly monolinear, with corners clipped into octagonal chamfers that create a consistent geometric rhythm across bowls, terminals, and joins. Counters are tight and rectangular-leaning, apertures are small, and the overall texture is dense and emphatic, especially in extended text. The lowercase follows the same angular construction with simplified forms and sturdy stems, while numerals echo the octagonal silhouette for a uniform, engineered look.
Best suited to bold headlines, posters, and brand marks that need a tough, engineered presence. It can work well for packaging, event graphics, esports or athletic identity systems, and high-contrast signage where the angular silhouettes reinforce a technical or industrial theme. For longer passages, it will perform most comfortably in short bursts such as subheads, labels, or callouts with added spacing.
The faceted geometry and tight, forceful spacing give the font a hard-edged, utilitarian tone. It reads as technical and assertive, with associations to industrial labeling, futuristic interfaces, and competitive sports or tactical branding. The repeated chamfers add a machined, precision-cut feel that emphasizes strength and impact over softness or warmth.
The font appears designed to translate an octagonal, machined geometry into a cohesive alphabet, prioritizing impact and a distinctive faceted voice. Its consistent chamfer logic suggests an intent to evoke precision-cut lettering and rugged, no-nonsense communication for modern display contexts.
The design’s clipped corners create strong vertical emphasis and a staccato rhythm, particularly noticeable in letters with diagonals and bowls. Because counters and apertures are small at this weight, legibility will generally improve with generous tracking and at display sizes, where the facet detailing becomes a defining feature rather than visual noise.