Sans Superellipse Fylij 2 is a very bold, normal width, monoline, italic, normal x-height font visually similar to 'Racon' by Ahmet Altun (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: sports branding, team apparel, headlines, posters, gaming ui, sporty, tech, futuristic, assertive, dynamic, speed emphasis, impact display, tech styling, brand marking, rounded corners, squared curves, oblique, compact, stencil-like cuts.
A heavy, obliqued sans with a squared, superelliptical construction: round letters resolve into rounded rectangles, and corners are consistently softened rather than fully circular. Strokes appear largely uniform, with crisp terminals and frequent angled shears that reinforce forward motion. Counters are tight and boxy, and many forms feature small, deliberate cut-ins and notches (notably in curved letters), giving a slightly engineered, segmented feel. Overall spacing reads compact and dense, producing a strong, blocky texture in words.
Best suited for short, high-impact applications such as sports identities, team numbers, event posters, punchy editorial headings, and gaming or tech-forward interface branding. The dense, heavy word color and forward slant make it most effective at display sizes where its squared counters and cut details remain clear.
The font projects speed and force—confident, competitive, and slightly futuristic. Its oblique slant and compact massing evoke motorsport and athletic branding, while the squared curves and cut details add a technical, industrial tone.
The design appears intended to blend rounded-rectangle geometry with a fast, italicized stance, creating a robust display voice that feels engineered and modern. The consistent corner rounding and purposeful notches suggest an aim for a distinctive, industrial signature without sacrificing quick recognition in bold titles.
Distinctive superellipse shapes are especially apparent in O/0 and other rounded forms, which look like rounded rectangles rather than true circles. The uppercase set feels sturdy and geometric, while the lowercase maintains the same hard-edged, built-from-blocks logic, keeping a cohesive rhythm across cases. Numerals follow the same compact, angular approach, helping mixed alphanumeric strings stay visually consistent.