Sans Superellipse Yemy 12 is a very bold, very wide, medium contrast, italic, normal x-height font.
Keywords: sports branding, racing, headlines, posters, gaming ui, futuristic, sporty, aggressive, techy, dynamic, speed cues, impact, branding, sci-fi tone, display focus, rounded corners, slanted, chunky, industrial, streamlined.
A heavy, slanted sans with wide proportions and a compact, low-contrast construction. Letterforms are built from rounded-rectangle geometry: flat terminals, softened corners, and broad curves that read more like superelliptical blocks than circles. Many glyphs incorporate horizontal cut-ins or notches that create internal white slashes, adding a layered, speed-line effect across counters and bowls. The overall rhythm is dense and solid, with sturdy strokes, tight apertures in places, and simplified shapes designed to hold up at large sizes.
Best suited to high-impact display work such as sports identities, racing and automotive graphics, gaming titles, tech-forward posters, and bold UI callouts where a sense of speed and strength is desirable. It performs especially well in short phrases, logos, and large-scale typography where the internal cut details remain clearly visible.
The font conveys motion and impact, with a distinctly aerodynamic, motorsport-like attitude. Its blocky curves and repeated internal slashes suggest machinery, performance branding, and a sci‑fi interface sensibility, balancing toughness with a sleek, engineered finish.
The design appears intended to deliver a fast, futuristic display voice by combining rounded-rectangle letter skeletons with consistent slant and repeated inline cut details. The goal is a strong, branded texture that reads immediately from a distance while still offering distinctive character in close-up.
The numerals and capitals share the same rounded, chamfer-free silhouette and consistent slant, helping the set feel unified in display settings. The signature internal cuts are visually prominent and become a defining texture when set in longer lines, so spacing and color are optimized for bold headlines rather than subtle text.