Sans Faceted Wumi 3 is a very bold, very wide, medium contrast, italic, tall x-height font.
Keywords: sports branding, headlines, posters, logos, game ui, aggressive, sporty, industrial, futuristic, comic-book, impact, speed, edginess, modernity, distinctiveness, angular, faceted, blocky, chiseled, oblique.
A heavy, oblique display sans built from sharp planar cuts instead of smooth curves. Letterforms are wide and compactly massed, with large counters kept simple and geometric; many joins and terminals are clipped into diagonal facets that create a chiseled silhouette. Strokes maintain a sturdy, uniform presence with only subtle modulation coming from the angled construction, and spacing is tight enough to read as a cohesive, high-impact block in text. The lowercase is robust and assertive with a tall, dominant x-height and simplified shapes that echo the uppercase’s slabby geometry.
Best suited to short, high-impact settings such as sports identities, team or event graphics, action-oriented posters, and bold packaging callouts. It can also work for game or tech interfaces where a tough, angular voice is desired, especially in titles, labels, and UI headers rather than extended reading.
The faceted construction and forward slant project speed, impact, and a hard-edged confidence. Its black, cut-metal look leans toward action and competition—more shout than conversation—making it feel energetic and slightly aggressive. Overall it suggests a contemporary, tech-meets-sports attitude with a poster-ready punch.
The design appears intended to deliver maximum presence with a fast, dynamic slant and a distinctive faceted geometry that replaces curves with decisive cuts. It prioritizes visual impact and a memorable silhouette, aiming for a modern, engineered feel that remains legible at display sizes.
Diagonal notches and clipped corners repeat consistently across the set, creating a rhythmic "machined" texture at both large and medium sizes. Numerals follow the same angular logic, staying broad and sturdy for emphasis. In longer lines the strong slant and tight sidebearings create a dense, forward-driving typographic color.