Sans Superellipse Gigir 10 is a very bold, normal width, monoline, upright, normal x-height font visually similar to 'School Activities JNL' by Jeff Levine and 'Radley' by Variatype (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: headlines, posters, branding, packaging, signage, industrial, athletic, confident, utilitarian, retro, impact, clarity, modernity, robustness, uniformity, rounded, blocky, compact, squared, sturdy.
A heavy, compact sans with squared silhouettes and generously rounded corners. Strokes are uniform and dense, with large counters and rounded-rectangle bowls that keep forms open despite the weight. Terminals are blunt and softly radiused, and joins stay clean and geometric, giving letters a machined, modular feel. The uppercase is tall and commanding, while the lowercase uses simple, robust shapes with a single-storey a and g; numerals follow the same squarish, rounded logic for a cohesive set.
Best suited to display work where strong shape and high contrast against the background are needed: headlines, posters, logos, labels, and wayfinding or signage. It also fits sporty or industrial branding systems that want a compact, powerful typographic voice.
The overall tone is bold and no-nonsense, balancing friendliness from the rounded corners with a tough, engineered presence. It reads as modern-industrial with a hint of sporty, scoreboard-like energy, designed to project certainty and impact.
The design appears intended to deliver maximum impact with a clean geometric system, using rounded-square construction to stay approachable while remaining assertive. It prioritizes bold presence and consistent texture across letters and figures for attention-grabbing, brand-forward typography.
Wide apertures and simplified construction help maintain legibility at large sizes, though the dense weight creates tight internal spacing in small details. The most distinctive signature is the consistent superelliptical rounding across curves, corners, and counters, which keeps the texture even and highly uniform in headlines.