Sans Superellipse Otrah 2 is a bold, normal width, low contrast, upright, normal x-height font visually similar to 'Ft Thyson' by Fateh.Lab, 'Hurdle' by Umka Type, and 'Winner Sans' by sportsfonts (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: headlines, posters, signage, branding, packaging, industrial, tech, utilitarian, retro, impact, systematic, technical, signage-ready, rounded corners, squared curves, condensed caps, blocky, tall proportions.
A compact, heavy sans with tall proportions and a strong vertical rhythm. Curves are built from rounded-rectangle geometry, giving bowls and counters a squared, superelliptical feel with softened corners rather than true circles. Strokes are consistently thick with minimal contrast, and joins are crisp, producing sturdy, poster-like silhouettes. The lowercase maintains a workmanlike structure with short terminals and simplified curves, while numerals and capitals read as particularly condensed and uniform, emphasizing a stacked, modular texture in text.
Best suited to headlines, posters, signage, and branding where a compact, high-impact sans is needed. It also works well for packaging, UI labels, and product graphics that benefit from a technical, modular feel and consistent, blocky letterforms.
The overall tone feels industrial and technical, with a no-nonsense, engineered look. Its rounded-square construction adds a subtle retro-futurist flavor—friendly at the corners, but still firm and authoritative. The texture is bold and rhythmic, evoking signage, equipment labeling, and display typography with a pragmatic edge.
The design appears intended to deliver a sturdy display sans built from rounded-square geometry—combining the efficiency and clarity of a technical grotesk with softened corners for a more approachable, contemporary finish. The condensed, uniform capitals and dense texture suggest a focus on strong visual presence and repeatable, system-like consistency.
Round elements such as O/C/G/Q and the bowls of B/P/R show the signature rounded-rectangle shaping, and apertures tend to be tight, reinforcing a dense, high-impact color. The sample text demonstrates strong word-shape regularity, with an assertive presence that favors short headlines and label-length lines over delicate, airy settings.