Sans Faceted Jima 4 is a regular weight, wide, monoline, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: display, logos, branding, posters, game ui, futuristic, tech, sci-fi, angular, geometric, sci-fi styling, geometric system, interface labeling, logo display, faceted, sharp, chiseled, modular, stencil-like.
A geometric, faceted sans with straight-sided construction and frequent chamfered corners in place of curves. Strokes remain consistently linear with abrupt joints, producing pointed terminals and shield-like counters in several capitals and numerals. The character set leans wide in overall footprint, with a rhythmic mix of open, angular bowls and flattened horizontal bars that keep the texture crisp and mechanical in lines of text. Lowercase forms are simplified and schematic, echoing the same planar cuts and giving the alphabet a cohesive, engineered feel.
Best suited for display typography where its angular detailing can be appreciated—logos, headings, posters, packaging accents, and entertainment design. It also fits UI labels, game HUDs, and techno-themed graphics where a crisp, engineered voice is desired, especially for short strings like names, codes, and buttons.
The font reads as futuristic and technical, with a hard-edged, manufactured tone reminiscent of interface labeling, spacecraft markings, or angular fantasy/sci-fi titling. Its faceting adds a sense of speed and precision, while the consistent geometry keeps it cool and deliberate rather than expressive or humanist.
The design appears intended to translate sans-serif skeletons into a faceted, planar system—replacing curves with chamfers and straight segments to produce a cohesive sci-fi/tech aesthetic. It prioritizes distinctive silhouette and themed personality over neutral text invisibility, making it most effective at headline sizes and in controlled layouts.
In longer text, the repeated angles and chamfers create a distinctive zig-zag cadence, especially where joins form V-shaped notches and tapered points. Numerals follow the same shield-and-chevron language, helping alphanumerics feel unified for codes, identifiers, and display settings.