Sans Superellipse Ikdib 7 is a very bold, normal width, low contrast, upright, tall x-height font visually similar to 'Dic Sans' by CAST and 'LFT Iro Sans' by TypeTogether (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: headlines, posters, branding, packaging, logotypes, bold, playful, punchy, quirky, friendly, attention, impact, clarity, character, chunky, compact, blocky, rounded corners, soft-rectangular.
Letterforms are built from chunky, superelliptical blocks with strongly rounded corners and a generally monolinear feel. Curves resolve into squared-off terminals, producing a distinctive “soft-rectangular” silhouette across bowls and shoulders, while counters are small and often vertically oriented. Proportions emphasize a tall lowercase with sturdy stems, and the overall rhythm is dense and poster-like, with subtle irregularities in curvature that add character without becoming messy.
Best suited to headlines, posters, packaging, and bold branding where a friendly but forceful voice is needed. It can work well for sports, entertainment, food, and youth-oriented graphics, as well as short UI labels or badges when space is limited and emphasis is required. For longer passages, it will be more effective in brief bursts due to its dense color and tight counters.
This typeface projects a blunt, high-impact tone with a slightly quirky, handmade confidence. The rounded-rectangle logic keeps it friendly and approachable, while the heavy mass and compact counters make it feel assertive and attention-grabbing. Overall it reads as playful-but-tough rather than refined or delicate.
The design appears intended for maximum visual impact at display sizes, using rounded-rectangle construction to stay approachable while remaining emphatically bold. Its simplified geometry and compact internal spaces prioritize strong silhouettes and immediate recognition over delicate detail.
The numerals match the heavy, rounded-rect geometry and keep strong, simple silhouettes for quick identification. In the sample text, the dense texture and tight apertures make word shapes feel compact, reinforcing the font’s signage-like presence.