Sans Superellipse Felat 1 is a very bold, normal width, medium contrast, italic, normal x-height font visually similar to 'Bunuelo Clean Pro' by Buntype, 'Faculty' by Device, 'Aeonis' by Linotype, 'Core Sans N' and 'Core Sans NR' by S-Core, and 'Jesaya' by Typodermic (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: headlines, sports branding, posters, packaging, app headers, sporty, urgent, modern, industrial, punchy, impact, speed, branding, density, clarity, oblique, condensed feel, rounded corners, ink-trap hints, sturdy.
A heavy, oblique sans with compact proportions and a strong forward slant. Letterforms are built from rounded-rectangle geometry: curves are squared-off and smooth, with softened corners and broad, flat terminals. Strokes are thick and consistent, with subtle contrast emerging mainly from joins and counters rather than calligraphic modulation. Counters are relatively tight, and several glyphs show slightly pinched or notched interior shaping that improves separation at bold sizes. The overall rhythm is dense and energetic, with robust capitals and sturdy lowercase forms that maintain clarity despite the weight.
Best suited for bold headlines, sports and fitness branding, event posters, packaging callouts, and UI/header moments where strong emphasis is needed. It performs especially well in short phrases, signage-like settings, and tight layouts where a dense, forward-leaning presence helps create urgency and momentum.
The tone is assertive and fast, projecting motion and intensity through the pronounced slant and compact, muscular shapes. Its rounded-rectangle construction adds a contemporary, engineered feel—confident rather than playful—well suited to high-impact messaging.
The design appears intended to deliver maximum impact with a streamlined, contemporary silhouette: a bold, slanted sans engineered for speed, clarity, and branding force. Its rounded-rectangle curves and tight apertures suggest a focus on controlled geometry and punchy display readability.
The numerals follow the same blocky, rounded-rect logic, reading clearly at display sizes. The italic angle is consistent across cases and figures, creating a cohesive, headline-driven texture that favors short bursts of text over extended reading.