Sans Faceted Myle 4 is a very bold, normal width, medium contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: posters, album covers, sports branding, gaming titles, event flyers, gothic, industrial, aggressive, retro, militant, impact, intimidation, gothic revival, logo use, headline punch, angular, chiseled, blackletter-leaning, high-impact, hard-edged.
A heavy, angular display face built from straight strokes and sharp planar cuts, replacing curves with faceted corners and notched joints. The forms are compact and blocky with squared terminals, frequent chamfers, and occasional internal cut-ins that create a carved, blade-like negative space. Counters tend to be small and polygonal, and the overall texture reads dense and dark, with tight apertures and minimal rounding. Capitals and lowercase share a consistent, rigid geometry, and the figures follow the same chiseled construction for a unified set.
Best suited to short, high-impact settings such as posters, title treatments, album or merch graphics, and bold branding that benefits from a hard-edged voice. It can work well for logos and wordmarks, especially where a gothic/industrial aesthetic is desired, but is less appropriate for extended body copy due to its dense texture and sharp detailing.
The font projects a stern, forceful tone with a distinctly gothic-meets-industrial flavor. Its sharp edges and carved details suggest toughness, severity, and a slightly archaic or metal-inspired attitude, making text feel emphatic and confrontational rather than neutral.
The design appears intended as a punchy display face that modernizes blackletter-like severity through simplified, geometric construction. Its faceted cuts and squared terminals aim to deliver a carved, weaponized look while keeping letterforms relatively straightforward and sans-driven for strong, immediate recognition in headlines.
The sample text shows strong presence at headline sizes, with the faceting and notches forming a lively pattern across lines. The narrow openings and dense silhouettes can reduce readability at smaller sizes or in long passages, where the internal cuts may visually compete within words.