Sans Superellipse Erty 5 is a bold, wide, low contrast, italic, normal x-height font visually similar to 'Black Square' and 'Kabyta' by Agny Hasya Studio (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: sports branding, motorsport, esports, tech packaging, posters, sporty, futuristic, technical, dynamic, assertive, convey speed, project strength, modernize branding, tech aesthetic, rounded corners, superelliptic, oblique, square-round, compact apertures.
A slanted, heavy sans with squarish round forms and superelliptic curves that read like rounded rectangles rather than true circles. Strokes are thick and even, with crisp, mostly straight terminals and consistently softened corners; counters tend toward rectangular bowls with tight openings. The rhythm feels engineered and fast, with slightly condensed internal space and a firm baseline presence, while the figure set mirrors the same boxy-round construction for a cohesive alphanumeric texture.
Best suited to display roles where impact and motion matter: sports identities, motorsport or esports graphics, product packaging for tech and fitness, and attention-grabbing poster or social headlines. It can also work for UI labels or dashboards when used large enough to preserve the tight apertures and squared counters.
The overall tone is energetic and performance-oriented, suggesting speed, strength, and modern tech. Its rounded-square geometry keeps it approachable while still feeling sharp and purposeful, creating a confident voice suited to contemporary, action-leaning branding.
The design appears intended to combine a streamlined, speed-forward slant with a rounded-square reminder of industrial design and digital hardware. By keeping contrast minimal and corners consistently softened, it aims for strong legibility at large sizes while projecting a modern, engineered character.
The oblique angle is integrated into the letterforms rather than applied as a simple shear, helping maintain stable widths and consistent corner radii across glyphs. Numerals and capitals share a unified, squared-off silhouette, producing a distinctive, modular look in headlines.