Sans Superellipse Tigen 10 is a very bold, narrow, medium contrast, upright, normal x-height font visually similar to 'ATF Alternate Gothic' by ATF Collection, 'AZ Scorch' by Artist of Design, 'Trade Gothic Next Soft Rounded' by Linotype, and 'Brown Pro' by Shinntype (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: posters, headlines, packaging, merch, stickers, rough, handmade, rugged, playful, posterish, impact, texture, informality, distressed, blunt, blocky, inked, irregular.
A heavy, compact sans with rounded-rectangle construction and softened corners, rendered with visibly uneven edges and slight wobble in strokes. Counters are generally small and enclosed, giving letters a dense, punchy texture, while terminals stay blunt rather than tapered. The outlines look intentionally distressed—like stamped ink or rough brush-fill—creating subtle variations in contour and width from glyph to glyph. Spacing and widths feel lively and not strictly uniform, which adds an organic rhythm in text settings.
Best suited to display applications such as posters, headlines, packaging callouts, merch graphics, and sticker-style branding where a bold, tactile texture is desirable. It also works well for short captions or labels when you want an intentionally rough, analog voice rather than a clean, neutral finish.
The overall tone is bold and gritty, with a handmade, analog feel that reads as informal and energetic. Its roughened silhouette suggests DIY printmaking, punk zines, or stamped signage, balancing toughness with a slightly playful, cartoonish friendliness from the rounded forms.
Likely designed to deliver a compact, high-impact sans with a deliberately imperfect, printed texture—prioritizing character and presence over pristine geometry. The rounded-rectangle skeleton keeps forms approachable while the distressed edges add grit and personality for expressive branding and display typography.
In running text the dense color and irregular edges create strong texture; the distressed details become a key feature at display sizes and can visually fill in at very small sizes. Numerals and capitals carry the same chunky, stamped character, supporting attention-grabbing titling and short emphatic phrases.