Sans Superellipse Esrif 5 is a regular weight, normal width, low contrast, italic, normal x-height, monospaced font.
Keywords: sports branding, tech interfaces, product labeling, posters, headlines, techy, sporty, industrial, retro, dynamic, speed emphasis, technical tone, display impact, systematic rhythm, oblique, squared, rounded, compact, ink-trap-like.
A slanted, monolinear sans with squared, superelliptical construction and rounded-rectangle counters. Strokes stay fairly even, with flat terminals and subtly chamfered corners that keep the shapes crisp at angles. The rhythm is tightly structured and consistent across the set, with compact bowls, squared-off curves, and small triangular notches in places (suggesting ink-trap-like cuts or stylized joins). Numerals are similarly condensed and angular, reinforcing a mechanical, grid-friendly feel.
Works best for display-driven settings where a technical, high-motion impression is desired—sports graphics, esports or tech branding, UI headings, product labels, and poster headlines. It can also suit short blocks of copy when you want a structured, engineered voice, though the angular details and slant will be most effective at moderate to larger sizes.
The overall tone is fast, engineered, and slightly aggressive, blending a technical workstation vibe with a sporty, forward-leaning stance. Its squared curves and sharp detailing evoke industrial labeling and retro-futuristic display typography rather than soft, humanist warmth.
The design appears intended to deliver a disciplined, modern-mechanical look by combining rounded-rectangle geometry with an oblique stance and sharp, cut-in details. The consistent footprint and structured forms suggest it was drawn to feel system-ready and impactful in compact, attention-grabbing typography.
Uppercase forms emphasize geometric stability with rounded-rectangle inner spaces, while many lowercase letters read like italicized, machine-cut shapes with firm horizontals. The slant is consistent and the glyphs maintain a disciplined footprint, which helps the font feel precise and systematized. Diagonal-heavy letters (like K, V, W, X, Y) look particularly energetic due to the combination of oblique angle and hard edges.