Sans Superellipse Esrik 2 is a regular weight, normal width, medium contrast, italic, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, logotypes, branding, ui, sportswear, futuristic, technical, sporty, sleek, dynamic, modernization, speed, precision, tech branding, distinctiveness, oblique, rounded corners, angular curves, square-round, streamlined.
A slanted sans with a squared-off, superelliptical construction: bowls and counters read like rounded rectangles, while curves often resolve into crisp, chamfer-like corners. Strokes are clean and mostly uniform, with subtle modulation and frequent flat terminals that reinforce a machined, engineered feel. The uppercase shows wide, open forms with softened corners, and the numerals echo the same squircle geometry, especially in 0 and 8. Spacing and rhythm feel steady and controlled, emphasizing clarity over softness despite the rounded geometry.
This font suits headlines, brand marks, and short-form messaging where a fast, technical aesthetic is desired. Its crisp, rounded-rectangular forms also work well in UI labels, dashboards, and product titling where a contemporary, engineered tone supports the content. It is particularly fitting for sports, mobility, electronics, and esports-style visual systems.
The overall tone is modern and performance-oriented, combining rounded-rectangle friendliness with sharp, aerodynamic angles. It suggests speed, technology, and precision—confident rather than playful—making it feel at home in contemporary interfaces and branded systems with a forward-looking voice.
The design appears intended to fuse geometric clarity with a distinctive squircle-based silhouette, producing an italicized, streamlined voice that feels engineered and contemporary. The consistent rounded-corner construction and flat terminals aim to deliver a recognizable, high-tech identity while remaining legible in practical settings.
Diagonal joins and angled cuts appear consistently in letters like N, K, and Z, giving the italic slant extra momentum. Round letters such as C, G, and O stay distinctly squarish, which creates a recognizable signature in both display and short text. The lowercase maintains the same geometric logic, with compact, controlled curves and firm terminals that keep the texture taut.