Sans Faceted Epvu 11 is a very bold, normal width, high contrast, italic, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, sports branding, gaming, logos, aggressive, industrial, futuristic, sporty, hazard, impact, speed, grit, branding, display, angular, faceted, chiseled, slanted, stencil-like.
A heavy, slanted display sans built from sharp planar cuts rather than curves, producing a faceted silhouette with clipped corners and hard terminals throughout. Strokes are thick and compact, with wedge-like joins and occasional narrow pinch points that heighten the sense of contrast inside the solid forms. Many glyphs include small, irregular cutout notches that read as intentional “chips” or stencil breaks, creating a distressed texture without reducing overall mass. Counters are tight and geometric, and the lowercase is compact with a straightforward, utilitarian construction that keeps rhythm punchy in words.
Best suited to short, prominent settings such as headlines, posters, and title cards where the faceted forms and cutout details can read clearly. It fits sports branding, gaming/entertainment graphics, and logo lockups that want a tough, kinetic voice. Use with generous size and spacing when maximum legibility is needed.
The overall tone is forceful and high-energy, with a rugged, engineered feel. The faceting and chipped cutouts suggest speed, impact, and machinery—more action-oriented than refined. It conveys a slightly menacing, game-like intensity that pairs well with bold, competitive messaging.
The design appears intended as an assertive display face that replaces smooth curves with sharp facets and purposeful breaks, creating an “armored” texture. Its slant and compact heft aim to communicate motion and impact while staying structurally consistent across the alphabet and numerals.
The distinctive internal notches become a key identifying feature in longer text, adding visual noise that increases character at larger sizes while potentially reducing clarity at small sizes. Numerals and capitals maintain the same clipped, armored geometry, keeping the set cohesive for headline use.