Sans Superellipse Etkid 2 is a very bold, very narrow, low contrast, italic, normal x-height font visually similar to 'Peridot Latin' and 'Peridot PE' by Foundry5, 'Factual JNL' by Jeff Levine, and 'Heading Now' by Zetafonts (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: headlines, posters, sports branding, packaging, titles, sporty, urgent, confident, retro, loud, impact, space saving, speed, branding, condensed, slanted, heavy, blocky, rounded corners.
A tightly condensed, heavy sans with a strong forward slant and compact, superelliptical curves. Strokes are thick and generally uniform, with rounded-rectangle counters and softened corners that keep the forms from feeling sharp. The overall rhythm is vertical and tightly packed, with short apertures and compact internal spaces that create dense word shapes. Numerals and capitals share the same compressed, muscular construction, and the lowercase maintains a straightforward, utilitarian structure with a single-story a and compact bowls.
Best suited to display typography where punch and momentum matter: headlines, posters, sports and fitness branding, promotional graphics, and packaging callouts. It can also work for short subheads or labels when space is limited, but long passages of small text may feel dense due to the compressed width and tight internal spacing.
The font projects speed and impact, combining a racing-like slant with dense, high-pressure letterforms. Its tone feels assertive and attention-grabbing, with a slightly vintage advertising or sports-poster energy.
The design appears intended to deliver maximum visual impact in minimal horizontal space, emphasizing speed and intensity through a steep slant and compact, rounded construction. It prioritizes bold recognition and a unified, blocky silhouette for branding and promotional use.
The narrow set width and tight counters make the texture dark and continuous, especially in long lines or all-caps. The italic angle is pronounced enough to read as dynamic rather than simply oblique, and the rounded geometry helps maintain legibility at display sizes while keeping a cohesive, engineered look.