Sans Superellipse Imlof 6 is a very bold, very wide, medium contrast, italic, normal x-height font.
Keywords: sports branding, racing graphics, gaming titles, team logos, posters, sporty, futuristic, aggressive, energetic, technical, speed, impact, branding, display, tech feel, oblique, extended, rounded, square-rounded, streamlined.
A heavy, forward-slanted sans with extended proportions and a compact, aerodynamic rhythm. Letterforms are built from rounded-rectangle geometry: broad shoulders, softened corners, and largely closed apertures, with frequent horizontal shears that reinforce speed. Strokes stay consistent and weighty, while terminals tend to be clipped or angled rather than fully rounded, creating crisp entry/exit points. Several glyphs include distinctive underline-like bars or detached baseline strokes, adding a custom, engineered feel to the set.
Best suited to headlines, logos, and short bursts of copy where impact and motion are desirable—sports identities, racing-themed graphics, gaming/tech titles, and bold poster typography. It can work for UI labels or packaging accents when used sparingly and with generous spacing, but it is most effective as a display face.
The overall tone reads fast, competitive, and high-tech—closer to motorsport and sci‑fi interfaces than to neutral editorial typography. Its stance feels assertive and kinetic, with a display-driven swagger that suggests motion even when set static.
The font appears designed to communicate speed and power through oblique posture, extended width, and superelliptical construction. The clipped terminals and occasional underline-like components look intentional as a visual motif, aiming for a distinctive, branded voice rather than a purely neutral workhorse.
The design favors sturdy silhouettes and strong black shapes, which helps at large sizes but can tighten internal counters in letters like a/e/s and in numerals. The added bar elements on some characters create a recognizable signature and can act like built-in emphasis, but they also increase visual complexity in dense text blocks.