Sans Faceted Raki 9 is a bold, normal width, low contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, logos, game titles, album art, angular, industrial, techno, futuristic, assertive, high impact, stylization, sci-fi feel, signage punch, faceted, chiseled, geometric, blocky, crisp.
A heavy, faceted display sans with strokes built from straight segments and sharp corners rather than curves. Counters are compact and polygonal, with frequent beveled terminals that create a cut-metal silhouette and a slightly irregular rhythm across letters. Proportions read as sturdy and compact, with a relatively even stroke color and minimal contrast; rounds like O, C, and S appear as many-sided forms, while diagonals (K, V, W, X) are broad and emphatic. Numerals follow the same angular construction, maintaining consistent weight and a tight, engineered feel.
Best suited to headlines and short statements where the faceted geometry can read clearly—posters, packaging callouts, logos/wordmarks, game or film titles, and event branding. It can also work for UI accents or section headers in tech or gaming contexts when used sparingly and with ample spacing.
The overall tone is forceful and mechanized, evoking stamped signage, sci‑fi interfaces, and fantasy/metal-adjacent titling. Its sharp facets and dense black texture project intensity and urgency, with a distinctly constructed, tool-cut character.
The design appears intended to translate a chiseled, polygonal construction into a sans framework, replacing curves with planar cuts to create a strong, engineered texture. The goal seems to be high-impact display typography with a distinctive, angular voice that remains consistent across uppercase, lowercase, and numerals.
At text sizes the many bevels and tight internal spaces can make long passages feel busy, while at larger sizes the planar geometry becomes a defining stylistic feature. Mixed-case shows a deliberate display treatment rather than conventional text modulation, with distinctive, characterful shapes that prioritize style over neutrality.