Sans Superellipse Efnen 2 is a regular weight, normal width, low contrast, italic, tall x-height font.
Keywords: branding, headlines, posters, ui labels, app headers, futuristic, technical, sporty, sleek, energetic, speed cue, tech branding, modernization, geometric consistency, display clarity, oblique, rounded corners, squared curves, condensed feel, angular terminals.
A slanted sans with rounded-rectangle construction, where curves resolve into softened corners and straight segments keep the forms taut. Strokes are monolinear and crisp, with compact apertures and a slightly condensed feel that makes the glyphs read tall and forward-leaning. Many letters show squared bowls and superellipse-like counters (notably in O, D, 0), while diagonals and joins are clean and mechanical; the lowercase uses single-story a and g and maintains the same rounded-square logic. Numerals follow the same disciplined geometry, pairing flat-ish curves with clipped, rounded terminals for a consistent, engineered rhythm.
Well-suited to branding and display settings that benefit from a sleek, technical voice—such as product marks, automotive or sports-adjacent graphics, tech event titles, and interface headings or labels. It also works for short editorial callouts and packaging where a streamlined, engineered look is desired.
The overall tone feels modern and motion-oriented, suggesting speed, precision, and a techno-forward attitude. Its oblique stance and squared-round shapes give it a sporty, utilitarian character that fits contemporary digital and product aesthetics.
The design appears intended to merge a clean sans structure with superellipse-inspired rounding and a consistent oblique stance, creating a compact, performance-driven texture. Its geometry prioritizes repeatable shapes and a modern, digital feel over warmth or traditional readability cues.
The set emphasizes uniform stroke behavior and tight interior spaces, which can make smaller sizes feel dense; it visually favors larger sizes where the rounded corners and squared counters are most apparent. The forward slant is consistent across caps, lowercase, and numerals, reinforcing a cohesive, aerodynamic texture in text.