Sans Superellipse Yije 10 is a very bold, very wide, high contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, sports branding, logos, packaging, industrial, sporty, retro, assertive, blocky, maximum impact, brand stamp, retro display, sports energy, compact readability, rounded corners, squared curves, condensed counters, ink traps, stencil-like.
A heavy, wide display sans built from rounded-rectangle forms and squared-off curves. Strokes are massive with tight, vertical counters and small, pill-shaped apertures, creating a dense, poster-ready texture. Corners are consistently softened, and several joins show carved notches and chiseled cut-ins that read like ink-trap or stencil-style shaping rather than clean geometric transitions. The lowercase keeps simple, compact bowls with a single-storey a and a sturdy, minimal r, while numerals follow the same blocky superellipse logic with narrow interior openings.
Best suited to large-scale applications where density and mass are advantages: posters, punchy headlines, sports and esports branding, bold wordmarks, and packaging callouts. It can also work for short UI labels or signage when set with generous tracking, but it is not optimized for long-form reading due to its tight counters and heavy color.
The overall tone is forceful and attention-grabbing, with a no-nonsense, industrial confidence. Its rounded corners add a slightly playful, retro flavor, but the dominant impression remains tough, sporty, and engineered for impact.
The design appears aimed at delivering maximum impact with a cohesive rounded-rectangle construction, combining friendly corners with aggressive weight and engineered cut-ins to maintain clarity in crowded shapes. The result is a distinctive display face that prioritizes presence, branding memorability, and bold typographic rhythm.
Spacing and internal negative space are intentionally tight, so the font builds strong word shapes but can feel dark at smaller sizes. The distinctive notched joins and compressed counters become a key identifying feature in headlines and logos, especially where large sizes let the internal cuts read clearly.