Sans Faceted Angi 4 is a very bold, normal width, low contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: posters, headlines, logos, packaging, game titles, playful, edgy, retro, comic, hand-cut, impact, distinctiveness, diy feel, playfulness, ruggedness, faceted, angular, blocky, chiseled, irregular.
A heavy, all-caps-forward sans with sharp, planar facets replacing curves. Strokes are chunky and mostly monolinear, with corners clipped into small angles that create a cut-paper or chiseled silhouette. Proportions feel compact and slightly condensed in places, but with noticeable glyph-to-glyph irregularity that gives the alphabet a lively rhythm. Counters are simple and geometric (often squared-off), terminals are blunt, and round letters like O/C/G read as polygonal forms rather than true curves; the lowercase mirrors the same faceted construction with sturdy stems and short, angular joins.
Best suited for display work where impact and personality matter: posters, headlines, event graphics, packaging, and bold logo wordmarks. It can also fit game titles and playful branding that benefits from a rugged, angular texture; it is less appropriate for small-size body text where the heavy facets can crowd counters.
The overall tone is energetic and mischievous, with a rugged, handmade edge. Its faceted shapes and uneven stance evoke DIY lettering, pulp/comic titling, and playful “danger” signage rather than refined editorial typography.
The font appears designed to deliver maximum visual punch with a distinctive faceted construction, trading smooth curves for angular cuts to create a handmade, cutout-like texture. Its consistent chiseled geometry suggests an intention to feel bold, fun, and slightly gritty while remaining broadly legible at display sizes.
The design stays consistent in its use of clipped corners and polygonal bowls, which helps it hold together in longer lines despite the intentionally irregular contours. Numerals follow the same blocky, faceted logic, keeping a strong, poster-like presence.