Sans Superellipse Idmev 14 is a very bold, normal width, monoline, upright, normal x-height font visually similar to 'Heavy Duty' by Gerald Gallo, 'Sicret' by Mans Greback, and 'Crazy Robot' by Sealoung (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: headlines, posters, logos, packaging, signage, industrial, retro, assertive, playful, techy, high impact, modular feel, signage clarity, retro tech, blocky, rounded, geometric, compact, stencil-like.
A heavy, geometric sans with rounded-rectangle construction and broadly curved corners. Strokes are uniform and dense, producing compact counters and a strongly black typographic color. Many joins and terminals resolve into straight cuts and squared notches, giving several letters a subtly segmented, stencil-like feel. The overall rhythm is tight and chunky, with simplified forms, short apertures, and minimal internal detailing that keeps shapes bold and legible at display sizes.
Best suited to headlines and short statements where its dense weight and rounded-block forms can dominate the page. It works well for logos, packaging, signage, and bold UI/label applications that benefit from a strong, industrial presence. In longer passages it will read as a deliberate display texture, especially when set with generous spacing.
The font projects an industrial, retro-futurist tone—confident, mechanical, and slightly playful. Its chunky geometry and softened corners evoke arcade-era signage and utilitarian labeling, while the cut-in details add a technical, engineered character.
The design appears intended to deliver maximum impact through simplified, rounded-rect geometry, combining friendly cornering with hard, engineered cuts. It prioritizes a strong silhouette and consistent, modular rhythm for attention-grabbing display typography.
Uppercase forms are particularly solid and emblematic, with broad bowls and restrained apertures; lowercase echoes the same geometry with single-storey constructions and squared internal spaces. Numerals follow the same compact, rounded-rect logic, maintaining a consistent, block-forward texture in continuous text.