Sans Superellipse Ipko 10 is a very bold, very wide, medium contrast, italic, tall x-height font visually similar to 'Avionic' by Grype (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: sports branding, headlines, posters, gaming, packaging, athletic, aggressive, futuristic, industrial, high-impact, impact, speed, branding, display, modernity, oblique, blocky, squared, rounded, slanted.
This typeface uses heavy, compact strokes and a strongly slanted construction, with broad, squared silhouettes softened by rounded corners. Curves tend to resolve into superellipse-like forms and rounded rectangles, giving counters a boxy, engineered feel rather than a purely geometric circle. Terminals are mostly blunt and cut on angles, and joins stay firm and planar, producing a tight, forward-leaning rhythm. The overall color is dense and uniform, with simplified interior spaces and sturdy, headline-first letterforms.
Best suited for large-scale display use where impact and speed are priorities—sports identities, esports and gaming graphics, automotive or racing themes, punchy headlines, posters, and bold packaging. It can also work for short UI labels or section headers when a strong, kinetic voice is desired, but the dense shapes suggest avoiding long text at small sizes.
The tone is fast, forceful, and competitive, evoking motorsport, action branding, and modern tech styling. Its forward slant and hard-edged geometry read as energetic and assertive, while the softened corners keep it from feeling brittle. Overall it projects a confident, performance-driven mood.
The design appears intended to deliver a modern, high-performance display voice by combining wide, block-based letterforms with an oblique stance and rounded-rectangular curvature. Its simplified geometry and blunt, angled terminals prioritize immediacy, separation, and brand presence in attention-grabbing settings.
Uppercase forms are highly compact and rectangular, with several characters relying on angled cut-ins and notches to maintain differentiation at heavy weight. Lowercase follows the same blocky logic, with single-storey structures and minimal modulation. Numerals match the set’s squared, engineered style and hold up visually as display figures.