Sans Superellipse Isse 10 is a very bold, wide, high contrast, upright, tall x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, sports branding, packaging, signage, industrial, athletic, poster, impact, ruggedness, branding, legibility, blocky, compressed counters, rounded corners, stencil-like cuts, ink-trap notches.
A heavy, squared-off sans with rounded-rectangle geometry and tightly controlled curves. Strokes are thick and assertive, with compact counters and frequent vertical terminals that feel cut rather than softly tapered. Many joins and inside corners show small triangular notches or cut-ins, creating a subtly engineered, almost stencil-like texture. The rhythm is strongly vertical and compact in the bowls, while overall widths remain generous, producing a dense, high-impact silhouette in both caps and lowercase.
This face is well suited to headlines, posters, and bold brand marks where maximum presence is needed. It should work especially well for sports or fitness identity, product packaging, and punchy signage that benefits from dense letterforms and a rugged, engineered texture. In running text, its tight counters and heavy mass will likely feel overwhelming unless set large with generous spacing.
The tone is bold and utilitarian, evoking sports branding, industrial labeling, and display typography built for impact. Its rigid shapes and carved details give it a tough, mechanical attitude rather than a friendly or delicate one. The overall impression is loud, confident, and attention-grabbing.
The design appears intended to deliver a compact, forceful display voice built from rounded-rectangle forms, with deliberate cut-in details to increase character and maintain clarity in dense shapes. It prioritizes strong silhouettes and an industrial, constructed feel over softness or neutrality.
The numerals follow the same blocky, rounded-rect logic as the letters, with simplified forms and tight interior space that reads best at larger sizes. The sample text shows strong word-shape presence but a very dark color on the page, suggesting it’s optimized for headlines and short phrases rather than extended reading.