Sans Superellipse Penav 11 is a very bold, normal width, low contrast, upright, normal x-height font visually similar to 'Jawbreak' by BoxTube Labs, 'Gainsborough' by Fenotype, 'Bystone' by GraphTypika, 'Herchey' by Ilham Herry, 'Neusa Neu' by Inhouse Type, 'Hemispheres' by Runsell Type, 'TS Diamante' by TypeShop Collection, and 'Hockeynight Sans' by XTOPH (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: headlines, posters, branding, packaging, signage, industrial, sporty, techy, authoritative, compact, impact, strength, clarity, modernity, squared, rounded, blocky, condensed, geometric.
A heavy, geometric sans with squared proportions softened by generous corner rounding. Strokes are uniformly thick with minimal modulation, producing dense, high-impact word shapes. Curves are built from rounded-rectangle forms rather than true circles, and many terminals are blunt and square-cut. Counters are compact and rectangular, apertures are relatively tight, and spacing reads sturdy and slightly condensed, giving lines a packed, poster-like rhythm. Numerals follow the same squared, monolithic construction for consistent color in text.
Best suited to headlines, posters, logos, and bold branding systems where compact, punchy letterforms are needed. It also works well for packaging, signage, and UI callouts that benefit from a sturdy, high-contrast-from-background silhouette and consistent, geometric texture.
The overall tone is bold and utilitarian, with a contemporary, engineered feel. Its rounded-square construction reads sporty and industrial at once—confident, loud, and designed to project strength rather than delicacy.
The font appears intended to deliver maximum impact with a clean, geometric construction: a no-nonsense display sans that stays friendly through rounded corners while remaining dense and emphatic in text.
The design emphasizes stability through flat horizontals and verticals, with rounded corners preventing the texture from feeling harsh. Uppercase forms appear particularly solid and sign-like, while the lowercase keeps the same blocky logic for a unified voice across cases.