Sans Faceted Miba 6 is a bold, normal width, monoline, upright, normal x-height font visually similar to 'Panton Rust' by Fontfabric, 'B52' by Komet & Flicker, 'Revx Neue' by OneSevenPointFive, and 'Raker' by Wordshape (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: posters, headlines, logos, sports branding, game ui, industrial, sporty, technical, arcade, military, impact, machined look, retro tech, athletic tone, branding, octagonal, angular, chamfered, blocky, compact.
A heavy, geometric sans with faceted construction: curves are consistently replaced by straight segments and clipped corners, producing octagonal bowls and chamfered terminals. Stroke weight is uniform and sturdy, with squared joins and a tight, compact rhythm that keeps counters relatively small and punchy. Uppercase forms are broad and stable, while the lowercase follows the same angular logic with single-storey shapes and simplified apertures. Numerals echo the same cut-corner geometry, including a sharply faceted zero and stacked, slabby figures.
Best suited for display typography where impact and structure matter: posters, headlines, team or event branding, logos, packaging, and game/UI titles. The faceted shapes read especially well at medium to large sizes, where the angular details can register clearly without clogging counters.
The overall tone is tough and utilitarian, with a mechanical, engineered feel. Its sharp facets and compact massing also evoke varsity sports lettering and retro arcade aesthetics, giving it an assertive, no-nonsense voice.
The design appears intended to translate a geometric sans into a cut-metal, chamfered system that feels precise and durable. By replacing roundness with planar facets and keeping strokes uniform, it aims for strong legibility and a distinctive industrial character in branding and titling contexts.
Diagonal strokes are steep and clean, and many letters use clipped inside corners that reinforce a consistent “machined” texture across words. The squared punctuation and the strong, straight-sided curves create high visual impact, especially at display sizes.