Sans Superellipse Ipfo 6 is a very bold, wide, medium contrast, italic, normal x-height font visually similar to 'Chubbet Distended' by Emboss, 'Molde' by Letritas, and 'PODIUM Sharp' by Machalski (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: headlines, posters, sportswear, branding, packaging, sporty, urgent, loud, modern, industrial, impact, speed, bold branding, athletic display, modern utility, blocky, rounded, oblique, compact, punchy.
A heavy, forward-leaning sans with broad proportions and rounded-rectangle construction throughout. Strokes are thick and stable, with compact counters and soft corner radii that keep the forms smooth rather than sharp. Terminals are mostly flat and cut on a consistent slant, reinforcing the italic momentum. The overall rhythm is dense and high-impact, and the numerals match the same squared-round geometry for a cohesive set.
Best suited for short, high-impact text such as headlines, posters, title cards, apparel graphics, and bold brand marks. It can work for punchy subheads and callouts, but long passages will appear very dark and tight at smaller sizes unless spacing is opened up.
The tone is assertive and energetic, with a fast, competitive feel created by the strong slant and compressed internal spaces. Rounded corners temper the aggressiveness just enough to feel contemporary and engineered rather than harsh. It reads as confident, attention-grabbing display typography.
The design appears intended to deliver maximum impact with a streamlined, modern silhouette: wide, rounded-rectangular letterforms paired with a consistent forward slant for speed and emphasis. The unified geometry across caps, lowercase, and figures suggests a display-first workhorse for energetic branding and promotional typography.
The superelliptical curves show up most clearly in round letters and numerals, which feel like rounded boxes rather than true circles. The texture in paragraph settings is dark and continuous, so it performs best when given room (size, tracking, or shorter line lengths) to avoid becoming overly dense.