Sans Faceted Rago 10 is a very bold, narrow, low contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: posters, headlines, album art, event flyers, game titles, punk, gothic, comic, rowdy, hand-cut, attention-grabbing, thematic display, diy texture, edgy branding, graphic impact, faceted, angular, chiseled, jagged, blocky.
A heavy, faceted display face built from sharp planar cuts that replace curves with irregular angles. Strokes stay broadly consistent in thickness, while edges shear and taper into wedge-like terminals, creating a broken, hand-cut silhouette. Proportions are compact with tight counters and short apertures; diagonals are prominent and often slightly kinked, giving letters a lively, uneven rhythm. The lowercase echoes the uppercase structure with simplified, chunky forms and diamond-like dots on i/j, and the numerals follow the same chiseled geometry for a cohesive set.
Best suited to short, high-impact settings such as posters, headlines, packaging accents, album covers, and event or venue flyers where a strong graphic voice is needed. It can also work for game titles or themed promotions that benefit from an aggressive, cut-in-stone texture, but it is less appropriate for long-form text where the jagged rhythm may fatigue the eye.
The overall tone feels loud and mischievous, with a rough-edged energy that reads as rebellious and slightly spooky. Its jagged facets suggest DIY cut-paper or carved signage, lending a playful menace that fits bold, attention-grabbing messaging.
The design appears intended to deliver maximum visual punch through bold massing and fractured, angular construction, evoking carved or cut-letter aesthetics without relying on traditional ornament. It aims to create a distinctive silhouette and a gritty, energetic texture that remains legible at display sizes.
The texture comes as much from the inconsistent angular cuts as from the heavy mass, so even at larger sizes it produces a strong graphic pattern. Spacing appears intentionally irregular in feel, and the sharp interior corners give the text a crunchy, stamped look in continuous reading.