Sans Faceted Etge 7 is a bold, wide, low contrast, italic, normal x-height font visually similar to 'Rigid Square' and 'Siro' by Dharma Type, 'MVB Embarcadero' by MVB, 'PF Encore Sans Pro' by Parachute, 'Purista' by Suitcase Type Foundry, and 'Foundry Monoline' by The Foundry (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: sports branding, team apparel, headlines, gaming ui, poster graphics, sporty, industrial, tactical, techy, aggressive, impact, motion, edge, modernity, durability, faceted, angular, chamfered, compact counters, slanted.
A heavy, right-leaning sans with sharply faceted construction, where curves are replaced by chamfered corners and planar cuts. Strokes are consistently thick with little modulation, producing dense, dark letterforms and small, squared counters. The geometry favors straight segments and clipped terminals; rounds like C, G, O, and Q read as octagonal forms, and joins are clean and hard-edged. Proportions are generally wide with a steady rhythm, while the slant and abbreviated apertures keep the texture tight in running text.
Best suited for bold display settings such as sports identity systems, event posters, esports/gaming graphics, and product branding that benefits from an aggressive, mechanical texture. It performs well in short headlines, logos, and large typographic statements where the faceted shapes and tight counters can be appreciated without crowding.
The overall tone feels muscular and assertive, with a purposeful, engineered edge. Its angled facets and forward slant suggest motion and impact, lending a competitive, tactical personality that reads as modern and performance-oriented rather than friendly or delicate.
The design appears intended to translate stencil-like, machined facets into a clean sans framework, prioritizing impact and speed through a consistent slant and clipped geometry. It aims to provide a recognizable, high-energy voice with a strong silhouette for branding and display typography.
Numerals echo the same clipped, polygonal logic—especially 0, 6, 8, and 9—with clear separation and a blocky presence. The slant is consistent across uppercase, lowercase, and figures, and the faceting remains uniform enough to keep headlines cohesive at larger sizes.