Sans Faceted Epga 3 is a bold, normal width, medium contrast, italic, short x-height font.
Keywords: posters, headlines, logos, gaming, sports branding, futuristic, techno, industrial, aggressive, mechanical, sci‑fi styling, speed emphasis, industrial texture, display impact, angular, faceted, chamfered, stenciled, forward-leaning.
This typeface is a forward-leaning, faceted sans with sharp planar cuts in place of curves. Strokes are built from straight segments with frequent chamfers and clipped corners, creating an almost machined, polygonal silhouette across both cases and numerals. The forms show deliberate irregularity and notched details that read like distressed edges, while counters stay compact and angular (notably in O/Q/0 and B/8). Proportions vary slightly by glyph, with a compact lowercase that sits low relative to the ascenders, and a consistent rightward slant that reinforces motion.
Best suited to display contexts where its faceted construction can be appreciated: headlines, posters, event graphics, and logo/wordmark treatments. It also works well for gaming/UI titles, sci‑fi themed packaging, and sports or motorsport branding where speed and impact are desirable. Use with generous sizing and spacing when you want the distressed facets to remain crisp.
The overall tone feels high-energy and engineered, evoking sci‑fi interfaces, motorsport graphics, and rugged hardware labeling. The faceting and deliberate nicks add a gritty, combative edge, giving the face a techno-industrial attitude rather than a polished corporate feel.
The design appears intended to translate a geometric sans into a sharp, multi-planar look that suggests speed and machining, while adding surface texture through chiseled corners and notched joins. The consistent slant and angular counters aim for a distinctive, branded voice rather than neutral readability.
At larger sizes the cut facets and inner notches become a defining texture, while at smaller sizes those details may visually merge, increasing the perceived density. The uppercase reads as emblematic and display-oriented, and the numerals carry the same angular construction for cohesive branding in codes or model numbers.