Sans Superellipse Jirab 6 is a very bold, normal width, monoline, upright, normal x-height font visually similar to 'Outlast' by BoxTube Labs and 'Mexiland' by Grezline Studio (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: headlines, logos, gaming, posters, signage, techy, futuristic, industrial, arcade, assertive, impact, clarity, branding, display, blocky, chunky, compact, geometric, modular.
Letterforms are built from chunky strokes and rounded-rectangle geometry, with corners softened into consistent radiused turns. Counters tend to be squarish and compact, and many joins resolve into straight segments rather than continuous curves, creating a crisp, machined rhythm. The overall texture is dark and blocky, with short terminals, occasional angled cuts, and a slightly modular construction that keeps shapes tight and uniform.
It works well for sci‑fi or gaming titles, esports and tech branding, UI headers, posters, and product/packaging marks that want a rugged digital tone. The heavy, compact construction also suits logos, badges, and on-screen callouts where high contrast and a strong presence are priorities.
This font projects a tough, assertive tone with a distinctly tech-forward attitude. Its squared, modular curves and dense black shapes evoke arcade interfaces, sci‑fi labeling, and industrial signage, giving it an energetic, engineered feel rather than a friendly one.
The design appears intended for bold display use where immediate recognition matters: short words, titles, and labels that benefit from a compact, engineered aesthetic. Its rounded-rect foundation and simplified shapes suggest an emphasis on consistency and strong silhouettes across letters and numerals.
Distinctive squarish counters appear in characters like B, D, O, and 0, while several lowercase forms (such as a, e, and g) lean toward simplified, single-storey, geometric constructions. Numerals share the same rounded-rectangle logic, keeping the set visually cohesive in mixed alphanumeric strings.