Sans Superellipse Endit 1 is a bold, wide, low contrast, italic, normal x-height font.
Keywords: sports branding, tech branding, headlines, posters, game ui, futuristic, sporty, techy, dynamic, industrial, speed, modernity, impact, precision, branding, square-rounded, compact, angular, streamlined, mechanical.
A slanted, square-rounded sans with a compact, forward-leaning structure and softly chamfered corners that read like rounded rectangles. Strokes are sturdy and uniform, with broad curves built from superelliptical geometry rather than true circles, giving counters a squarish, engineered feel. Terminals are clean and mostly blunt, and many joins emphasize diagonals and flat horizontals, creating a tight, efficient rhythm. Numerals follow the same squircle logic, with open, simplified forms and consistent stroke endings that keep texture even in larger settings.
This font suits energetic branding and display typography where a sense of speed and modern engineering is desired—sports identities, esports and gaming graphics, product marks, and tech-forward campaigns. It also works well for short UI labels, dashboards, and interface titling where bold, squircle-based forms reinforce a contemporary, device-like aesthetic.
The overall tone feels fast and engineered, combining a racing-italic attitude with a controlled, technical precision. Its rounded-square curves suggest modern hardware, UI surfaces, and industrial design, while the strong slant adds motion and urgency.
The design appears intended to merge a sporty italic stance with a geometric, rounded-rectangle construction for a contemporary, high-impact voice. Its consistent corner treatment and simplified, sturdy shapes suggest an emphasis on clarity, punch, and a recognizable “tech surface” silhouette across letters and figures.
Round letters like O, Q, and 0 are notably squarish, with generous corner radii that keep the silhouette friendly despite the angular skeleton. The sample text shows a dense, high-impact color on the page with clearly differentiated shapes, favoring assertive display use over delicate typographic nuance.