Sans Superellipse Meke 6 is a regular weight, normal width, low contrast, italic, normal x-height font visually similar to 'Neutraliser Alternate' and 'Neutraliser Sans' by HamburgerFonts, 'Charles Wright' by K-Type, and 'Nulato' by Stefan Stoychev (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: branding, sportswear, tech ui, posters, packaging, sporty, futuristic, technical, dynamic, sleek, convey speed, modernize tone, add dynamism, feel engineered, rounded, oblique, streamlined, soft-cornered, monoline.
A rounded, oblique sans with a monoline feel and soft-cornered construction that frequently resolves into rounded-rectangle and superellipse-like shapes. Curves are squared-off at the extremes, giving bowls and counters a gently boxy geometry, while terminals stay clean and blunt rather than tapered. The overall rhythm is forward-leaning and energetic, with compact apertures, consistent stroke presence, and numerals that match the same rounded, engineered logic.
Well-suited to contemporary branding, sports and automotive-themed graphics, and tech-forward interfaces where a sense of speed and modernity is helpful. It can also work for short editorial callouts, posters, and packaging headlines thanks to its distinctive oblique stance and rounded, engineered shapes.
The font reads as modern and aerodynamic, with a subtle sci‑fi and motorsport flavor. Its rounded squareness keeps it friendly, while the slant and tight, streamlined forms add motion and a technical edge.
Likely intended to provide a sleek, motion-oriented sans that feels engineered and contemporary while staying approachable through rounded corners. The design emphasizes consistent geometry and a unified forward slant for strong stylistic cohesion across uppercase, lowercase, and numerals.
Uppercase forms show simplified, geometric construction with softened corners, and lowercase follows the same system for a cohesive, designed-in-italics impression rather than a mechanically slanted roman. The punctuation and figures shown maintain the same rounded-rectilinear DNA, supporting consistent texture in continuous text and display lines.