Sans Superellipse Firim 3 is a very bold, very wide, low contrast, italic, normal x-height font visually similar to 'Tactic Round' and 'Tactic Sans' by Miller Type Foundry and 'Beachwood' and 'Hyperspace Race' by Swell Type (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: headlines, sports branding, gaming, technology ui, posters, futuristic, techno, sporty, dynamic, industrial, speed cue, modern display, tech aesthetic, brand impact, geometric coherence, rounded, extended, oblique, blocky, streamlined.
A heavy, extended oblique sans with rounded-rectangle (superellipse) construction and consistently softened corners. Strokes are monolinear and dense, with broad horizontals and generous internal counters that stay open despite the weight. The oblique slant is strong and uniform, and many terminals are cleanly sheared, producing a streamlined, aerodynamic silhouette. Rounded bowls (O, Q, 0, 8) read as squarish ovals, while diagonals (A, V, W, X, Y, Z) are sturdy and sharply cut, maintaining a tight, forward-leaning rhythm. Numerals echo the same squared-round geometry, with the 1 rendered as a simple vertical and other figures built from thick, flattened curves and straight segments.
Best suited for display applications where impact and speed are desirable: headlines, esports and sports identities, product marks, packaging, posters, and tech-oriented UI/overlay graphics. It can work for short UI labels or dashboards, but its weight and slant make it less appropriate for long-form text.
The overall tone feels fast, engineered, and contemporary—more “machine-made” than humanist. Its oblique stance and wide set give it an assertive, motion-forward presence associated with performance, tech interfaces, and modern sports aesthetics.
The likely intent is a modern, high-energy display sans that combines rounded-square geometry with an aggressive forward slant to suggest motion and performance. The consistent superelliptical construction aims for a cohesive, futuristic system across letters and figures.
The design leans on horizontal emphasis and flattened curves, creating a strong baseline banding in text. In running copy, the bold mass and pronounced slant can reduce whitespace between letters, so it reads best when given ample tracking and used at display sizes.