Sans Superellipse Hulat 8 is a very bold, normal width, low contrast, upright, normal x-height font visually similar to 'Acumin' by Adobe, 'CF Blast Gothic' by Fonts.GR, 'Chandler Mountain' by Mega Type, 'Sans Beam' by Stawix, and 'Lektorat' by TypeTogether (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: headlines, posters, branding, sports, packaging, assertive, industrial, sporty, retro, impact, solidity, clarity, modern utility, blocky, rounded, compact, sturdy, punchy.
A heavy, block-forward sans with rounded-rectangle construction and softened corners throughout. Counters are small and often squarish, creating a compact, ink-trap-free silhouette that reads as dense and powerful. Terminals are blunt and flat, curves are more like superelliptical arcs than true circles, and joins stay simple and structural. Uppercase forms feel tall and commanding, while lowercase keeps similarly chunky proportions with single-storey shapes and minimal modulation, producing a consistent, poster-ready rhythm. Numerals match the same squared-round logic, with wide, stable forms and tight interior spaces.
Works best for display typography where strong presence is needed: headlines, posters, logos/wordmarks, sports or team-style graphics, and bold packaging. It can also serve for short callouts, labels, and UI badges where a compact, high-impact voice is beneficial, but the small counters suggest avoiding very small sizes for extended reading.
The overall tone is bold and no-nonsense—confident, tough, and slightly retro in a utilitarian way. Its squared curves and compressed counters give it an industrial, athletic energy that feels suited to impact messaging rather than subtlety.
Designed to deliver maximum visual impact with a uniform, geometric-but-softened skeleton. The rounded-rectangle forms and blunt terminals prioritize clarity and strength, aiming for a contemporary industrial/sport aesthetic that holds up in large, high-contrast applications.
Spacing appears intentionally tight and efficient, helping text set into a solid mass at display sizes. The angular-to-rounded balance is consistent across letters and numbers, giving the design a coherent “machined” feel even in curved characters.