Sans Superellipse Femod 2 is a very bold, very narrow, low contrast, italic, normal x-height font visually similar to 'Fairweather' by Dharma Type, 'Verbatim' by Monotype, 'Maleo' by Tokotype, and 'Herokid' by W Type Foundry (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: sports branding, posters, headlines, packaging, labels, athletic, assertive, urgent, sporty, industrial, impact, speed, compression, loud display, branding, condensed, oblique, blocky, rounded corners, high impact.
A compact, tightly condensed sans with a pronounced oblique slant and heavy, uniform stroke weight. Letterforms are built from rounded-rectangle geometry: broad vertical stems, softly radiused corners, and squared counters that keep curves controlled rather than circular. Terminals are clean and blunt, with minimal modulation and crisp joins that maintain a dense, high-ink rhythm. The lowercase is sturdy and compact, while figures are tall and emphatic, matching the same narrow, upright proportions and simplified construction.
Best suited for high-impact display settings such as sports branding, event posters, promotional headlines, packaging, and bold labels where condensed width helps fit more characters into limited space. It can also work for short UI banners or wayfinding-style callouts when used large enough to preserve interior clarity.
The overall tone is forceful and energetic, with a clear sports and action-forward attitude. Its compressed stance and strong forward lean convey speed, urgency, and competitiveness, making it feel loud and confident even at short word lengths.
This design appears intended to deliver maximum impact in a compact width, combining a forward-leaning stance with rounded-rectangular construction to suggest speed and strength. The simplified, low-detail shapes prioritize immediacy and consistency for attention-grabbing titles and branding.
The narrow set and thick strokes create strong texture and can close up quickly in longer lines, especially where internal spaces are tight. The consistent superelliptic shaping keeps the style coherent across caps, lowercase, and numerals, producing a recognizable, logo-friendly silhouette.