Sans Superellipse Enroz 6 is a regular weight, very wide, low contrast, italic, normal x-height font.
Keywords: tech branding, sports identity, ui headlines, product logos, transportation graphics, futuristic, technical, sleek, sporty, aerodynamic, convey speed, tech modernity, streamlined display, digital signage, brand distinctiveness, rounded corners, oblique, extended, monoline, superelliptical.
A slanted, extended sans with monoline strokes and rounded-rectangle (superellipse) geometry throughout. Curves are squarish rather than circular, with softened corners and flattened arcs that give counters a capsule-like feel. Terminals are clean and clipped, joins are smooth, and diagonals carry a consistent forward lean. Uppercase forms are wide and stable, while lowercase keeps a simple, modern structure with single-storey a and g; overall spacing reads open and linear, emphasizing horizontality.
Best suited to headlines, logotypes, and short-to-medium display copy where its width and slant can create momentum. It fits technology and mobility contexts—interfaces, product marks, automotive/transport graphics, esports and sports branding—especially when you want a clean, rounded, modern voice. In dense paragraphs it will feel assertive and space-hungry, so it performs better with generous leading and layout space.
The overall tone is fast and engineered—more cockpit display than editorial page. Its rounded-square shapes and forward slant suggest motion, efficiency, and contemporary tech culture, with a mildly retro-digital flavor.
The design appears intended to merge a neutral sans skeleton with superelliptical, rounded-square construction and an oblique stance to communicate speed and modernity. Consistent monoline strokes and simplified forms prioritize clarity and a controlled, engineered texture over calligraphic nuance.
Distinctive superelliptical bowls show up strongly in O/Q/0/8 and in the rounded corners of rectangular forms like D and U. Numerals match the same wide, rounded-square construction, with streamlined shapes and minimal stroke modulation that keep texture even in longer lines.