Sans Superellipse Fikur 2 is a very bold, very wide, monoline, italic, normal x-height font visually similar to 'Gorus' by Smartfont (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: headlines, branding, sportswear, gaming, posters, futuristic, sporty, techy, dynamic, industrial, speed cue, tech branding, impact display, modernization, aerodynamic styling, rounded corners, superelliptic, oblique, geometric, streamlined.
A heavy, slanted sans built from rounded-rectangle and superellipse-like forms, with large, open counters and consistently softened corners. Strokes read largely uniform, creating a clean, engineered texture, while terminals are clipped or gently angled to reinforce a sense of forward motion. Curves are squarish rather than circular, and many joins favor smooth, continuous transitions over sharp intersections. Numerals and letters share the same wide, aerodynamic construction, with distinctive cut-ins and horizontal apertures that keep dense shapes from filling in.
Best suited to bold display settings where its slanted, streamlined geometry can carry the visual identity—logotypes, headlines, posters, esports and motorsport graphics, product packaging, and UI callouts. It will be most effective at medium to large sizes, where the rounded corners and internal apertures remain clear.
The overall tone is fast, modern, and engineered—suggesting speed, machinery, and digital interfaces. Its oblique stance and compact internal cutouts give it an assertive, competitive energy that feels at home in contemporary tech and performance contexts.
The font appears designed to deliver a compact, high-impact word shape with a futuristic, speed-oriented voice. Its superelliptic construction and clipped details aim to balance solid mass with readable openings, producing a consistent, modern texture across letters and numerals.
The design’s rhythm is driven by repeated rounded-rectangular counters (notably in O/0 and similar bowls) and by short, horizontal notches that create a segmented, high-tech look. The lowercase shows a more modular, single-storey approach in key shapes, keeping the set cohesive and highly stylized.