The base font is Compacta Black (a widely available font; anyone with a copy of CorelDRAW or Flexi is going to have it).
The chisel effect is another matter. There is no effect filter in any drawing program anywhere that honestly does a good job in simulating a "prismatic" or "chisel" effect. The fundamental problem is computers can't properly calculate the centerline where two stems on a letter join. Photoshop can't do it either. Just run an inner bevel effect on some lettering and set the effect to a high value. You see oddball dips and turns in places where it should not happen. EnRoute3D has the same problem when trying to
computer carve out the chisel effect on material.
I just had to put that out there for anyone who might insist a certain filter does the job well. None do.
To build up a prismatic/chisel effect on lettering, you have to do a procedure that at first seems pretty complicated. The first part of the process is breaking the letter form apart into a number of separate path segments and using something like Corel's blend tool to make the centerline path. You'll have to use the "reverse path direction" command to get the 1-step blend to fall correctly in each section. Some sections will require you to span certain centerline gaps by hand.
Once you have an open path centerline correctly made for each letter you can use parts of that path to create closed objects to deform with cut, weld and intersect tools to make each chisel cut on the letter form.
Sure, this process can be a tad bit time consuming. But it is the only way to get the effect to look correct. The price is the same when you want 3D letters on a
sign to look right. Often you must hand carve them.
Computer driven routers can't do that effect right either.