Sans Superellipse Fenah 2 is a very bold, narrow, low contrast, italic, normal x-height font visually similar to 'Ramsey' by Associated Typographics, 'Kuunari' and 'Kuunari Rounded' by Melvastype, 'Industria Sans' and 'Industria Serif' by Resistenza, and 'Hockeynight Sans' by XTOPH (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: sports branding, headlines, posters, apparel, packaging, sporty, industrial, urgent, tactical, modern, impact, speed, space saving, modern utility, branding, condensed, oblique, blocky, rounded corners, squared curves.
A heavy, condensed oblique sans with compact proportions and a forceful, forward-leaning stance. Strokes are broadly uniform, with corners softened into squared curves that give bowls and counters a rounded-rectangle feel. Terminals are mostly straight and blunt, and joins stay tight, producing dense, high-impact word shapes. The rhythm is upright in structure but slanted in posture, with sturdy verticals, compact apertures, and numerals that match the same squared, engineered geometry.
Best suited to short, high-impact settings such as sports identities, team or event graphics, product logos, and poster headlines. It also works well on apparel, labels, and packaging where a condensed, energetic voice helps content cut through. For longer passages, its dense texture is more effective in brief callouts than extended reading.
The overall tone is assertive and kinetic, reading as fast, tough, and purpose-driven. Its compressed, muscular shapes suggest motion and efficiency, lending a competitive, utilitarian mood that feels at home in performance-forward branding.
The design appears intended to deliver maximum punch in a tight horizontal footprint while maintaining a modern, engineered smoothness through rounded-rectangle construction. The oblique angle and blunt terminals reinforce a sense of speed and toughness geared toward display-driven communication.
Round letters like O/Q and C/G show the family’s hallmark superelliptical construction, while diagonals (V/W/X/Y) emphasize the italic momentum. The lowercase maintains a compact, workmanlike texture, and the figures share the same blunt, squared softness for consistent impact in mixed text.