Sans Faceted Ravy 1 is a regular weight, normal width, low contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: game titles, fantasy branding, metal posters, album covers, event flyers, runic, medieval, metal, arcane, aggressive, carved look, thematic display, logo impact, fantasy tone, angular, chiseled, geometric, facet-cut, monoline.
A sharply angular display sans built from straight strokes and planar facets, replacing curves with beveled corners and pointed terminals. Stems are largely monoline with consistent stroke weight, while counters and bowls resolve into diamond and wedge-like shapes that keep interiors open but distinctly polygonal. Proportions vary by glyph, creating an uneven, hand-hewn rhythm; diagonals are prominent, and joins often form crisp chevrons and notches. Overall spacing reads moderately tight in text, with strong silhouette emphasis and high edge definition.
Best suited for short, high-impact settings such as game and tabletop branding, fantasy or horror titles, band/album typography, and promotional headers where the faceted silhouettes can be appreciated. It works well for logos, wordmarks, and large-size display lines; for longer passages, generous size and spacing will help preserve legibility.
The faceted, chiseled construction evokes runic and blackletter-adjacent cues while staying fundamentally sans, giving the font a ritualistic, fantasy-leaning tone. Its sharp geometry and pointed terminals add intensity and a slightly combative feel, suited to ominous or heroic themes rather than neutral everyday messaging.
The font appears designed to translate a carved, rune-like aesthetic into a clean, consistent typographic system, using faceted geometry and pointed joins to suggest engraving or cut metal. Its emphasis is on distinctive silhouettes and thematic atmosphere over neutral text efficiency.
The design maintains consistent angles and terminal treatment across uppercase, lowercase, and numerals, helping the set feel cohesive despite the intentionally irregular glyph widths. Many characters rely on distinctive interior cuts and diamond counters, which increases personality but can reduce readability at smaller sizes compared to smoother geometric styles.