Sans Superellipse Solam 6 is a very bold, normal width, high contrast, italic, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, logos, sports branding, game titles, futuristic, racing, aggressive, sporty, techy, impact, speed, modernity, precision, branding, slanted, compressed, angular, streamlined, cut-in.
A sharply slanted display sans built from rounded-rectangle skeletons and clipped, wedge-like terminals. Strokes are heavy and compact with crisp internal cut-ins that create narrow counters and a distinctive, mechanical rhythm. Curves are treated as superelliptical rounds, while joins and ends snap to angled facets, giving the letters a fast, forward-leaning profile. The overall texture is dark and punchy, with intentional notches and apertures that keep forms readable despite the mass.
This font is best suited to large sizes where its internal cut-ins and faceted terminals can read clearly—headlines, posters, title cards, and bold wordmarks. It fits energetic contexts such as sports branding, racing or automotive graphics, gaming UI/title treatments, and tech-forward promotional design. For extended body copy, it will be visually dominant and is better used sparingly as a display accent.
The font projects speed and impact, with a tone that feels motorsport-adjacent and sci‑fi industrial. Its slant and faceted terminals add urgency and motion, while the rounded-rect geometry keeps it controlled and engineered rather than expressive or casual. The result is confident, intense, and performance-oriented.
The letterforms appear designed to deliver maximum impact while suggesting motion and precision. By combining superelliptical rounds with aggressive angled cuts, the font aims for a contemporary, engineered feel that stands out in branding and titling contexts where speed and strength are key.
The design language is highly consistent across uppercase, lowercase, and figures, emphasizing repeated angled cuts and squared-off curves. Spacing appears tuned for tight, headline-style setting, where the dark color and directional slant form a strong horizontal flow. In longer lines, the distinctive shapes remain attention-grabbing and graphic rather than quiet or text-like.