Sans Superellipse Yety 11 is a bold, very wide, medium contrast, italic, tall x-height font.
Keywords: sports branding, racing graphics, headlines, posters, gaming ui, sporty, futuristic, technical, energetic, assertive, speed emphasis, tech aesthetic, display impact, branding tone, ui clarity, oblique, extended, rounded, square-rounded, streamlined.
A heavy, right-leaning sans with extended proportions and a pronounced superelliptical construction. Counters and bowls are built from rounded-rectangle shapes, giving O/C/D and similar forms a squared-off, aerodynamic feel. Terminals are mostly blunt with softened corners, and strokes show subtle modulation that reads as crisp rather than calligraphic. The rhythm is compact and forward-driven, with tight interior spaces and wide letterforms that keep word shapes stable at display sizes.
Best suited to high-impact applications such as sports identities, racing/event graphics, tech-forward posters, and game or product UI where a sense of speed is desirable. It performs especially well in large sizes for titles, logos, and short promotional lines, and can also work for buttons, labels, and scoreboard-style numerals when generous spacing is available.
The overall tone is fast, modern, and performance-oriented, suggesting motorsport, athletics, and sci‑fi interfaces. Its squared curves and oblique stance convey motion and decisiveness, while the rounded corners keep the voice approachable instead of harsh.
The design appears intended to deliver a bold, motion-driven voice through an oblique stance and superelliptical geometry, balancing sharp efficiency with rounded corners for legibility and approachability. Its extended width and squared curves emphasize a contemporary, engineered aesthetic aimed at attention-grabbing display typography.
Uppercase and lowercase share the same geometric logic, producing a consistent, engineered texture across lines. Numerals match the extended, rounded-rect aesthetic and feel designed to sit comfortably in headlines and UI-style callouts. The heavy weight and oblique angle make it visually dominant, favoring shorter strings over dense paragraphs.