Sans Faceted Angi 5 is a very bold, normal width, low contrast, upright, normal x-height font visually similar to 'Racon' by Ahmet Altun (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: posters, headlines, logotypes, packaging, sportswear, aggressive, industrial, comic-book, punk, sporty, high impact, edgy display, rugged branding, graphic texture, headline focus, chiseled, angular, blocky, jagged, faceted.
A heavy, all-caps-forward display sans built from hard, planar facets rather than smooth curves. Strokes are thick and largely uniform, with corners clipped into small angles that create a chiseled, cut-paper silhouette. Counters tend toward squarish apertures (notably in O, D, B, and 8), while diagonals are stout and slightly irregular, giving the outlines a hand-cut, energetic rhythm. Spacing reads compact and punchy, with simplified joins and minimal interior detailing that keeps the texture dense at larger sizes.
Best suited to posters, headlines, event graphics, album art, and bold branding where immediate impact matters. It also fits packaging and merch applications that benefit from a rugged, sporty or industrial attitude, and works well for short taglines or large typographic blocks.
The overall tone is loud and confrontational, with a gritty, streetwise edge. Its faceted geometry and jagged terminals evoke utility lettering, action/comic titling, and rough-cut signage, producing a bold, playful toughness rather than refined elegance.
The design appears intended to deliver maximum visual punch through thick strokes and faceted construction, replacing curves with clipped planes for a sharp, energetic silhouette. It prioritizes character and texture over neutrality, aiming for display-driven presence in contemporary graphic contexts.
Uppercase forms dominate the voice, but the lowercase and numerals follow the same faceted logic with noticeable quirky asymmetries (e.g., single-storey a and g, blocky t, and squared 0). The sample text shows strong word-shape impact, but the busy edges can accumulate into a noisy texture in longer paragraphs, favoring short bursts of copy.