Sans Superellipse Ipdi 6 is a very bold, very wide, medium contrast, italic, tall x-height font visually similar to '1312 Sugoi' by Ezequiel Filoni (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: sports branding, esports, posters, headlines, titles, sporty, techno, aggressive, futuristic, retro, speed, impact, modernity, branding, rounded corners, oblique slant, extended, blocky, chunky.
A heavy, oblique sans with extended proportions and rounded-rectangle geometry throughout. Counters tend to be compact and squared-off, while corners are consistently softened, giving the forms a superelliptical, machined look rather than a purely geometric circle-based one. Strokes are broadly uniform with only subtle modulation, and many joins and terminals are cut on a forward-leaning angle, reinforcing speed and direction. Spacing is tight-to-moderate for such a dense design, with wide letterforms and sturdy apertures that keep words from collapsing into a single mass at display sizes.
Best suited to display work where impact and motion matter: sports and esports branding, racing-themed graphics, event posters, trailer/title cards, and bold product packaging. It also works well for short UI labels or badges when a strong, energetic voice is desired, but its dense forms favor larger sizes over long-form text.
The overall tone is fast, forceful, and performance-driven, with a distinctly sporty, techno edge. Its forward slant and hard-edged cuts suggest motion, competition, and industrial precision, while the rounded corners keep it from feeling overly sharp or hostile. The result reads as bold and confident, with a slightly retro racing/arcade flavor.
The design appears intended to deliver maximum visual punch with a streamlined, speed-oriented silhouette. By combining wide, rounded-rectangle structures with oblique momentum and angled terminals, it aims to feel engineered and competitive while remaining cleanly sans and highly legible at headline sizes.
The numerals follow the same rounded-rect construction and angled detailing, making them feel cohesive in headlines and score-like readouts. Uppercase and lowercase share a consistent, compact counter style that favors impact over delicacy, and the punctuation and basic symbols shown carry the same squared, italicized rhythm.