Sans Faceted Egba 3 is a very bold, normal width, low contrast, italic, normal x-height font visually similar to 'Beachwood' by Swell Type (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: sports branding, team uniforms, posters, headlines, logos, sporty, aggressive, industrial, action, retro, impact, speed, toughness, display clarity, geometric cohesion, angular, oblique, blocky, condensed feel, chiseled.
A heavy, oblique sans with faceted construction: curves are replaced by crisp planar cuts, producing octagonal counters and sharply clipped terminals. Strokes are consistently thick with little visible modulation, and many joins form hard, geometric corners that read like beveled metal. The uppercase is compact and blocky, while the lowercase keeps a similar angular logic with sturdy bowls and shortened, slanted terminals; numerals follow the same cut-corner motif for a cohesive set. Overall spacing appears tight and rhythmically dense, emphasizing impact and forward motion.
Best suited to high-impact display work such as sports identities, team apparel graphics, event posters, gaming or action-themed headlines, and bold logo wordmarks. It also works well for short calls-to-action, packaging bursts, and title cards where a fast, aggressive tone is desired.
The letterforms project speed and force, combining a competitive sports tone with a rugged, machined feel. Its sharp facets and slanted stance create an assertive, action-oriented voice that reads as tough, energetic, and slightly retro-tech.
The design appears intended to deliver maximum punch with a streamlined, forward-leaning stance and a signature faceted geometry that replaces traditional curves. Its consistent bevel-like cuts suggest an aim for a tough, engineered look that stays legible and cohesive in large, attention-grabbing applications.
The faceting creates distinctive silhouettes and strong word-shapes at display sizes, but the dense weight and tight interior spaces make small-size text feel more compressed. The consistent corner-cut system unifies rounds (O, C, G) with straights (E, F, H), giving the font a deliberate, engineered character.