Sans Superellipse Yoky 2 is a very bold, very wide, medium contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, logos, posters, packaging, game ui, futuristic, industrial, techy, playful, impact, tech branding, modular feel, retro futurism, rounded corners, boxy, chunky, modular, compact counters.
A heavy, rounded-rectangle display sans with a superelliptical construction throughout. Strokes are uniformly thick with softened corners, producing a blocky silhouette and tight, rectangular counters. Curves are minimized in favor of squared bowls and squared-off terminals, while diagonals (notably in K, V, W, X, Y, Z, and 4) cut cleanly with crisp joins. Spacing and internal apertures are compact, giving lines of text a dense, solid texture; the dot and punctuation-like forms read as rounded capsules that match the overall geometry.
Best suited to large sizes where its tight counters and internal cut-ins remain clear—such as headlines, branding marks, sports or esports graphics, and tech-themed posters. It also fits UI titling for games or interfaces that want a bold, compact, futuristic voice. For long passages of small text, the dense forms may read heavy, so it performs best as a display face.
The overall tone is bold and assertive, with a distinctly techno and arcade-like flavor. Its rounded corners keep it friendly and toy-like, while the chunky, modular shapes add an engineered, sci‑fi attitude. The result feels confident, energetic, and slightly retro-futuristic.
The design appears intended to deliver maximum impact with a cohesive rounded-rect geometry, combining friendliness from softened corners with a machine-made, modular structure. Its consistent weight and compact apertures suggest a focus on strong silhouette recognition and a distinctive, tech-forward personality in short, high-visibility text.
Several letters emphasize stencil-like internal breaks and slit counters (e.g., E/S/2/3 forms), enhancing a mechanical rhythm. The uppercase and lowercase share the same squared, superelliptical logic, so mixed-case setting maintains a consistent, monolithic color.