Sans Superellipse Kybol 2 is a very bold, very wide, high contrast, upright, normal x-height font visually similar to 'Mule Cargo' by Menagerie Type (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: headlines, posters, branding, packaging, logos, retro, punchy, playful, bold, sporty, impact, approachability, retro flavor, logo readiness, graphic clarity, rounded, blocky, soft corners, compressed counters, heavy terminals.
A dense, rounded sans with a distinctly boxy, superellipse construction. Strokes are thick and confident, with softened corners and broad, flat joins that keep the silhouette sturdy and compact. Counters are relatively tight and apertures tend to be narrow, producing a chunky rhythm and strong color on the page. Curved letters (O, C, G) read as rounded rectangles, while diagonals (V, W, X, Y) stay blunt and weighty rather than sharp. Numerals follow the same heavy, squared-round logic, with generous bowls and short, stable horizontals.
Best suited to display settings where weight and rounded geometry can carry the message: headlines, posters, brand marks, packaging, and short promotional copy. It can also work for signage or UI moments that need a friendly, high-impact label style, but long passages will read as dense due to the compact counters.
The overall tone is loud and friendly, combining a retro display feel with a contemporary, graphic solidity. Its softened geometry makes it approachable, while the thick, compact shapes give it an assertive, headline-ready attitude.
The font appears designed to deliver maximum visual impact through heavy, rounded-rectangular letterforms, balancing toughness with approachability. Its consistent superellipse shapes suggest an intention to create a distinctive, logo-friendly voice that stays legible at large sizes and holds up in bold typographic layouts.
The design maintains consistent corner rounding across straight and curved forms, helping mixed-case settings feel cohesive. In text, the dense spacing and small interior openings emphasize impact over delicacy, especially in long lines and all-caps phrases.