Sans Superellipse Fibuk 2 is a bold, wide, low contrast, italic, normal x-height font visually similar to 'Sweet Square' by Sweet (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: headlines, branding, sportswear, posters, packaging, sporty, futuristic, technical, dynamic, assertive, speed, impact, modernity, precision, display, rounded corners, oblique, squared curves, streamlined, compact apertures.
A slanted, heavy sans with a squared-off superellipse construction: curves resolve into rounded-rectangle bowls and counters, and many terminals are clipped on diagonals for a fast, aerodynamic feel. Strokes are largely uniform with minimal modulation, producing solid, high-impact silhouettes. Proportions lean extended horizontally, with compact internal spaces and tight apertures that keep shapes dense and graphic. The numerals and capitals share the same angular rounding and consistent corner radii, reinforcing a cohesive, engineered rhythm.
Best suited for bold headlines, logos, and brand systems that want a streamlined, speed-centric voice. It works well in sports and motorsport aesthetics, tech product naming, packaging callouts, and punchy poster typography where the slant and dense shapes can read as intentional emphasis.
The overall tone reads energetic and performance-oriented, combining a motorsport/athletics pace with a clean, contemporary tech edge. Its oblique stance and chamfered details suggest motion and urgency, while the rounded-square geometry keeps it approachable rather than aggressive.
The design appears intended to deliver a modern, motion-forward sans built from rounded-square forms, balancing mechanical precision with softened corners. Its consistent geometry and oblique stance prioritize impact and a sense of velocity for display-driven typography.
Distinctive features include rounded-rectangular ‘O’/‘0’ forms, frequent diagonal cuts on terminals, and a single-storey ‘a’ paired with similarly simplified lowercase structures. The sample text shows strong word-shape continuity at larger sizes, with the dense counters making it feel especially suited to short bursts of copy rather than long reading.