Sans Superellipse Etduh 10 is a bold, narrow, monoline, italic, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, sports branding, tech branding, packaging, sporty, futuristic, urgent, technical, dynamic, space saving, motion emphasis, modern display, industrial clarity, brand impact, condensed, oblique, rounded corners, squared curves, high contrast by shape.
A condensed, right-leaning sans with monoline strokes and a squared-rounded construction. Curves resolve into superellipse-like corners, giving bowls and counters a rounded-rectangle feel rather than true circles. Terminals are mostly blunt and clean, with compact apertures and tight interior spaces that create a dense, high-impact texture. The rhythm is vertical and upright in structure despite the slant, with simplified, engineered forms and a consistent stroke weight across caps, lowercase, and figures.
Best used for short to mid-length display copy where speed and impact matter—headlines, posters, campaign graphics, and product branding. It also fits sports and automotive-style identities, tech or gaming interfaces, and packaging where a condensed, kinetic look helps conserve space while staying bold and recognizable.
The overall tone is fast and performance-driven, with a modern, tech-forward edge. Its oblique stance and compact shapes suggest motion and urgency, while the rounded-rect geometry keeps it sleek rather than aggressive. The result feels contemporary and utilitarian, suited to energetic, forward-looking branding.
The design appears intended to deliver a compact, high-energy italic sans that reads as streamlined and engineered. By using rounded-rectangle curves and uniform strokes, it aims for a contemporary, technical look that holds together strongly in bold display settings.
Uppercase forms are particularly tall and streamlined, and the numerals share the same squared-rounded logic for a cohesive alphanumeric set. The lowercase stays compact with straightforward, minimal detailing, helping maintain a consistent, mechanical voice across longer lines. At smaller sizes the tight counters may reduce clarity, while larger settings emphasize the distinctive rounded-rect silhouette.