Sans Faceted Mihi 10 is a bold, normal width, monoline, upright, normal x-height, monospaced font visually similar to 'Ki' by Mint Type and 'Archimoto V01' by Owl king project (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: display, headlines, posters, signage, labels, techno, industrial, arcade, mechanical, utilitarian, geometric rigor, signal clarity, retro tech, angular, faceted, octagonal, chamfered, blocky.
A compact, all-caps-forward sans with strongly faceted outlines: curves are replaced by crisp chamfers and short diagonals, producing octagonal counters in forms like O/0 and rounded joins throughout the alphabet. Strokes are uniform and sturdy, with square terminals and frequent 45° cuts at corners, giving the design a constructed, modular feel. Proportions are relatively tight with wide, stable horizontals; diagonals (A, V, W, Y, K) are straight and decisive, and bowls (B, P, R, 6, 9) read as polygonal rather than round. Numerals follow the same geometry—0 is an octagonal loop, 8 stacks two faceted loops, and 2/3/5 use sharp cornering—supporting consistent texture in mixed settings.
Well-suited to display typography where sharp geometry is a feature: posters, game and tech branding, packaging accents, equipment-style labels, and wayfinding or interface headings. It also works for short text blocks where a steady, uniform texture is desired and the angular character can carry the visual identity.
The faceted geometry and uniform stroke treatment create a crisp, engineered tone that reads as technical and robust. Its hard angles and compact rhythm evoke digital-era signage, arcade systems, and industrial labeling, projecting clarity and toughness rather than softness or warmth.
Likely designed to translate a geometric, faceted construction into a practical alphabet with consistent rhythm and strong silhouette recognition. The systematic corner chamfers suggest an intention to mimic machined or pixel-adjacent forms while maintaining clean readability in all-caps, mixed case, and numerals.
The uppercase set feels especially emblematic due to its strong polygonal silhouettes, while the lowercase retains the same chamfered construction for continuity. In text settings the even, regular spacing produces a steady typographic color that stays legible at moderate sizes and becomes striking in large display use.