Sans Superellipse Eskoj 4 is a bold, normal width, low contrast, italic, tall x-height font visually similar to 'Hyperspace Race' by Swell Type (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: sports branding, tech ui, gaming, headlines, posters, futuristic, technical, sporty, dynamic, sleek, contemporary branding, speed emphasis, technical clarity, display impact, rounded corners, oblique, geometric, extended joints, angular terminals.
A slanted geometric sans with rounded-rectangle construction and consistently softened corners. Strokes stay largely monolinear, with squared-off terminals and frequent chamfer-like cuts that emphasize a forward-leaning rhythm. Counters are compact and boxy (notably in O/0 and B/8), while straight stems and diagonals are drawn with clean, engineered precision. The uppercase reads wide and streamlined, and the lowercase pairs a tall, simple structure with open apertures and sturdy joins.
Best suited to display and short-to-medium text where its slant and squared curves can carry a strong voice: sports and esports identities, gaming titles, tech product pages, UI headers, and packaging or poster work. In dense body copy it may feel assertive, but it performs well for interface labels, dashboards, and attention-grabbing typographic systems.
The overall tone is fast, modern, and tech-forward, with a motorsport/industrial flavor driven by the oblique angle and squared, superelliptical curves. It feels confident and utilitarian rather than expressive or calligraphic, projecting speed and contemporary machinery aesthetics.
The design appears intended to merge geometric clarity with a sense of motion: rounded-rectangle forms for a contemporary, device-like feel, combined with an oblique stance and sharp cuts to suggest speed and precision. Consistent construction across letters and digits supports cohesive branding and interface use.
Figures and capitals share the same rounded-rect geometry, giving strong cross-set consistency in headings. The dot on i/j is a clean round point, and several glyphs use straight-cut joins and corners that create a crisp, engineered texture at larger sizes.