Sans Superellipse Gibuk 11 is a very bold, wide, monoline, upright, tall x-height font visually similar to 'Eurostile Next' and 'Eurostile Next Paneuropean' by Linotype and 'Metral' by The Northern Block (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: headlines, posters, sports branding, packaging, signage, athletic, industrial, techy, confident, playful, impact, modern branding, modular geometry, differentiation, blocky, squared, rounded corners, compact counters, high contrast ink-traps.
A heavy, geometric sans built from squared-off, rounded-rectangle forms with consistently blunt terminals. Curves resolve into superellipse-like corners, giving round letters a boxy silhouette and producing compact, rectangular counters in shapes like O, D, P, and B. Strokes are largely uniform, with occasional notches and angled cuts at joins and corners that read like subtle ink-trap styling. The lowercase is strongly built with a large x-height and short extenders, while capitals stay wide and stable, creating a dense, poster-like texture in text.
Best suited to headlines and display settings where its solid shapes and compact counters can read as intentional graphic texture. It fits athletic identities, bold product packaging, and punchy signage, and can also work for tech or industrial branding when a rounded-but-robust geometric voice is desired.
The overall tone is tough and energetic, combining sporty impact with a clean, engineered feel. Rounded corners keep it friendly enough for playful headlines, while the sharp cuts and tight counters add a purposeful, industrial edge. It reads as modern and assertive rather than delicate or formal.
The design appears intended to deliver maximum impact with a contemporary, modular geometry—pairing rounded-rectangle construction with small corner cuts to improve differentiation and add a technical, crafted signature at large sizes.
In running text the dark color and tight interior spaces create a strong horizontal mass, so it performs best when given generous tracking or larger sizes. Numerals follow the same squared, rounded geometry, and the distinctive cuts in letters like S, Z, and G add character without breaking the uniform, modular system.