Sans Faceted Funa 9 is a regular weight, normal width, monoline, italic, normal x-height font visually similar to 'Hudson NY Pro' by Arkitype (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: headlines, posters, sports branding, gaming ui, packaging, techno, sporty, angular, utilitarian, energetic, speed, precision, modernity, impact, technical feel, chamfered, geometric, hard-edged, stencil-like, compact.
A sharply angular italic sans with consistent, monoline stroke weight and frequent chamfered corners that replace curves with short planar facets. Bowls and rounds (C, G, O, 0, 8) are built from straight segments, giving a crisp, octagonal rhythm, while joins and terminals end in clean diagonal cuts. Proportions are fairly compact with sturdy verticals, open counters, and a forward slant that keeps the texture lively and directional; widths vary by letter in a conventional way (e.g., wide W, narrower I), maintaining readable spacing across mixed-case and numerals.
Works best in headlines, short UI labels, and branding where an angular, high-energy voice is desired. The faceted construction also suits sports identities, gaming or sci‑fi interfaces, and packaging or product markings where crisp, technical letterforms help the type stand out.
The faceted geometry and forward lean convey speed, precision, and a technical, engineered mood. It feels sporty and tactical—more “equipment label” than “book page”—with a confident, high-impact tone that reads as modern and slightly futuristic.
Likely designed to deliver a forward-leaning, engineered look by systematically converting curves into beveled facets while keeping stroke weight even for clarity. The aim appears to be a distinctive display sans that remains legible in short text while projecting motion and precision.
Lowercase forms echo the same chamfered construction, producing a cohesive family feel in continuous text; the dot on i/j is a small square, reinforcing the pixel-cut aesthetic. Numerals are bold and sign-like, with segmented curves that stay consistent with the uppercase’s octagonal vocabulary.