Sans Superellipse Orkib 2 is a bold, very narrow, low contrast, upright, tall x-height font visually similar to 'Marcinelle' by Fando Fonts (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: posters, headlines, packaging, logos, event promos, playful, retro, quirky, bouncy, friendly, attention grabbing, space saving, retro charm, friendly voice, display clarity, condensed, rounded, soft corners, bulky, irregular rhythm.
A condensed, heavy sans with rounded-rectangle construction and softened corners throughout. Strokes stay largely monoline, with blunt terminals and slightly inflated bowls that create a chunky, cutout-like silhouette. The letterforms show a gentle, uneven bounce in their vertical stance and a subtly irregular rhythm across the line, with tight internal counters and compact spacing that emphasize a tall, narrow profile. Numerals and capitals follow the same sturdy geometry, favoring simple, bold shapes over fine detail.
Well suited to short, high-impact headlines on posters, packaging fronts, and brand marks that want a friendly retro edge. It can also work for event promotions and social graphics where a dense, bold typographic color is helpful, while longer passages benefit from larger sizes and extra spacing.
The overall tone is upbeat and characterful, mixing a retro poster feel with a casual, slightly off-kilter energy. Its rounded geometry keeps it approachable, while the condensed heft adds punch and confidence in display settings.
The design appears intended to deliver maximum presence in a compact width, using rounded superellipse-like forms and monoline heft to stay playful and legible at display sizes. Its slightly irregular rhythm suggests a deliberate hand-made or animated flavor without leaving the realm of a clean sans structure.
The wobble-like alignment and compressed counters can build strong texture quickly, so it reads best with generous tracking and clear size separation between headlines and supporting text. The chunky shapes and rounded corners remain consistent across uppercase, lowercase, and figures, helping maintain a cohesive voice in mixed-case copy.