Sans Faceted Antu 4 is a very bold, normal width, monoline, upright, normal x-height font visually similar to 'British Vehicle JNL' and 'School Activities JNL' by Jeff Levine (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: posters, headlines, logos, sports branding, game ui, industrial, techno, arcade, athletic, tactical, impact, geometric styling, machined look, brand emphasis, display clarity, angular, faceted, chamfered, blocky, octagonal.
A heavy, geometric sans built from straight strokes and clipped corners, replacing curves with planar facets and chamfers. Counters tend toward octagonal or polygonal shapes, and terminals are cleanly cut, giving each glyph a hard-edged silhouette. Proportions are compact with sturdy stems and wide joins; spacing reads tight and purposeful, and the overall rhythm favors dense, poster-like texture in words and lines of text.
Best suited to display sizes where its faceted construction and dense color can read clearly: posters, titles, packaging callouts, and branding marks. It also fits interfaces and on-screen graphics for games or tech contexts, as well as sports or team-style applications where a bold, cut-corner look is desirable.
The font projects a rugged, engineered attitude—equal parts industrial and game-like. Its sharp geometry and cut-corner construction feel mechanical and assertive, lending a sporty, tactical tone that reads as modern and high-impact rather than friendly or delicate.
The design appears intended to translate a rounded grotesque skeleton into an angular, machined aesthetic, emphasizing impact and distinctive silhouette. By standardizing chamfered corners and polygonal counters across cases and numerals, it aims for a cohesive, emblematic voice that stays consistent in both single words and longer lines.
Diagonal strokes (as in K, V, W, X) stay crisp and slab-like, and rounded letters (O, Q, 0, 8, 9) are rendered as faceted loops, reinforcing the consistent polygonal system. The lowercase follows the same hard geometry, with simplified forms and short, angular bowls that prioritize graphic punch over softness.