Sans Superellipse Suta 6 is a bold, wide, high contrast, italic, normal x-height font.
Keywords: sports branding, headlines, posters, packaging, app ui, sporty, assertive, modern, dynamic, techy, speed emphasis, brand impact, display punch, modern utility, rounded, condensed, slanted, blocky, angular.
A heavy, right-slanted sans with rounded-rectangle construction and crisp, flattened curves that read as superelliptic rather than geometric circles. Strokes are sturdy and mostly monolinear, with selective thinning at joins and terminals that adds snap without turning the design into a serif. Counters tend to be tight and squared-off, apertures are compact, and many forms lean toward straight-sided bowls (notably in C/O/Q and the lowercase a/d/e). The overall rhythm is energetic and forward-leaning, with short extenders, compact spacing, and strong ink presence that favors display sizing.
This style works best for high-impact headlines, sports and motorsport branding, energetic advertising, and packaging that needs bold shelf presence. It can also suit UI labels, dashboards, and wayfinding where a slanted, contemporary voice is desired, provided sizes are generous enough to preserve the tight counters and apertures.
The tone is fast, punchy, and performance-oriented, combining a sporty italic stance with a slightly industrial, engineered feel. Rounded corners keep it approachable while the dense weight and narrow openings maintain a tough, no-nonsense voice. It suggests speed, impact, and contemporary branding rather than neutral text setting.
The design appears intended to deliver a forceful, speed-forward display sans built from rounded-rectangular geometry, balancing toughness with friendly curvature. Its compact openings, strong slant, and dense color prioritize immediate impact and a modern, athletic impression.
Uppercase forms are simplified and sturdy, with squared curves and minimal modulation; the Q’s tail is compact and the G is clean and open. Lowercase follows the same rounded-rectangle logic, with a single-storey a and a compact e; numerals are similarly blocky with softened corners and strong silhouettes for quick recognition.