Sans Faceted Yivy 6 is a very bold, very wide, low contrast, italic, normal x-height font.
Keywords: sport branding, racing graphics, team identity, gaming titles, posters, racing, aggressive, futuristic, sporty, dynamic, emphasize speed, maximize impact, add edge, project strength, modernize, slanted, angular, faceted, blocky, compact.
A heavy, right-leaning sans with squared-off, faceted construction that replaces curves with planar cuts. Counters are compact and apertures tend to be tight, giving the letters a dense, forward-driving silhouette. Stroke terminals are sharp and clipped, with wedge-like joins and occasional horizontal “shelf” cuts in curves (notably in S and some numerals), reinforcing the engineered, chamfered look. Overall spacing and letterfit read sturdy and compact, optimized for impact rather than delicacy.
Best suited to headlines, logos, uniforms/merch marks, and high-impact promotional graphics where a strong, kinetic voice is needed. It can work for short bursts of display text—such as posters, packaging callouts, and UI title cards—but will perform most confidently when set large with generous tracking and clear contrast against the background.
The tone is fast, assertive, and performance-oriented, evoking motorsport graphics, athletic branding, and sci‑fi or arcade-era titling. Its steep slant and hard-edged geometry communicate motion and mechanical energy, feeling loud and competitive even at medium sizes.
The design appears intended to deliver maximum impact and a sense of velocity through a steep oblique stance and faceted, chamfered letterforms. By minimizing roundness and keeping counters tight, it prioritizes a bold, aerodynamic silhouette that feels purpose-built for energetic display typography.
Round letters (O, C, G, Q) are rendered as rounded rectangles with distinct corner facets, keeping the texture consistently angular across the set. Numerals share the same clipped, aerodynamic styling, with prominent horizontal cuts that add a sense of speed-stripes. The overall texture becomes very dark in paragraph settings, so it reads best when allowed breathing room.