Sans Faceted Beru 3 is a very bold, normal width, low contrast, upright, normal x-height font visually similar to 'Level' by District, 'PODIUM Sharp' and 'POLIGRA' by Machalski, 'Brodaers' by Trustha, and 'Winner Sans' by sportsfonts (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: headlines, posters, sports branding, packaging, signage, industrial, athletic, assertive, retro, compact, impact, ruggedness, precision, headline clarity, brand presence, blocky, angular, chiseled, squared, heavy.
A dense, block-forward display sans with angular, faceted construction that replaces most curves with planar cuts and clipped corners. Strokes are consistently heavy with minimal modulation, producing solid silhouettes and tight internal counters (notably in B, 8, 9, and e). Proportions feel compact with short extenders, wide shoulders, and squared-off terminals; many round letters (C, G, O, Q) read as softened rectangles rather than true circles. The lowercase is sturdy and simplified, with single-storey forms and robust joins that keep texture even at large sizes.
Best suited to high-impact applications such as headlines, posters, sports and team marks, event promotions, packaging, and bold wayfinding or signage. It can also work for short UI labels or badges when adequate size and spacing are available to preserve counter clarity.
The overall tone is loud, forceful, and workmanlike—evoking industrial signage, sports identity systems, and rugged product labeling. Its faceted corners add a carved, machined feel that reads as confident and slightly retro without becoming decorative.
The design appears intended to deliver maximum punch with a compact, geometric rhythm, using faceted cuts to suggest toughness and engineered precision. It prioritizes strong silhouette recognition and a consistent headline texture over delicate detail or text-setting openness.
Counters are small relative to stroke weight, so the face gains impact as size increases; at smaller sizes the densest letters can close up. The numerals and capitals carry a particularly uniform, poster-like weight, helping headlines feel cohesive and emphatic.