Sans Superellipse Rybaw 4 is a regular weight, normal width, high contrast, italic, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, logos, sportswear, posters, packaging, sporty, technical, dynamic, sleek, futuristic, speed, modernity, precision, branding, impact, condensed feel, rounded corners, chiseled, angular, display.
A slanted, superellipse-driven sans with squared-off counters and generously rounded corners that create a rounded-rectangle skeleton. Strokes show noticeable contrast, with thicker verticals and thinner horizontals and joins, while terminals are mostly blunt and cleanly cut. Curves are tightened into flat-sided bowls (notably in C, O, Q, and the numerals), giving a compact, engineered rhythm. The lowercase is relatively narrow and upright in structure despite the italic angle, with a single-storey a and g, a straight, minimal i/j treatment, and a long, descending y; figures are similarly boxy, with squared apertures and an angled, streamlined construction.
Works best for headlines, brand marks, and short, high-impact messaging where a streamlined, kinetic voice is desirable. It fits well in sports, automotive, tech, and product contexts, and can also serve as a distinctive UI/overlay accent type for labels, scores, or navigation where a modern, engineered look is needed.
The overall tone is fast, controlled, and modern—more performance-focused than conversational. Its rounded-square geometry reads as technical and contemporary, while the italic slant adds a sense of motion and urgency suited to energetic branding.
Likely designed to merge a contemporary italic sans with a superellipse construction, emphasizing speed and precision through squared counters, rounded corners, and controlled stroke contrast. The intent appears to be a distinctive display voice that remains systematic and repeatable across the full alphanumeric set.
The design maintains consistent corner radii and a tight, uniform curvature strategy across letters and numbers, reinforcing a cohesive “rounded rectangle” theme. Letterforms stay open enough for short bursts of text, but the stylized bowls and condensed, slanted rhythm make it visually assertive and better suited to prominent settings than long passages.