Sans Superellipse Endaz 1 is a bold, very wide, low contrast, italic, normal x-height font.
Keywords: sports branding, technology branding, headlines, posters, product ui, futuristic, sporty, tech, convey speed, modernize tone, brand distinctiveness, system consistency, rounded, oblique, extended, streamlined, aerodynamic.
A rounded, extended sans with an oblique forward slant and a distinctly streamlined silhouette. Strokes are monoline and heavy, with soft corners and superelliptic curves that square off into rounded-rectangle counters. Terminals are frequently sheared or subtly angled, and joins are clean and mechanical, producing a fast, engineered rhythm. The spacing and proportions favor wide bowls and open apertures, while letters like S and Z emphasize horizontal flow through flattened curves and long, smooth strokes; numerals follow the same rounded-rect geometry with broad, stable forms.
This font is well suited to brand marks and headline typography where a sleek, modern voice is needed—sports and automotive-style identities, tech products, gaming or esports graphics, and promotional posters. It can also work for short UI labels or packaging callouts where space is limited but a dynamic, engineered look is desired; it is less geared toward long-form text where the strong slant and wide proportions may become tiring.
The overall tone feels contemporary and performance-driven, combining a friendly roundedness with a sleek, high-tech edge. Its forward lean and extended proportions suggest speed, motion, and modern machinery rather than classic neutrality.
The design appears intended to blend rounded-rectangle geometry with a forward-leaning, speed-oriented stance, creating a distinctive display sans that reads as modern, efficient, and motion-focused. Consistent superelliptic curves across letters and numerals suggest an emphasis on a unified system rather than calligraphic variation.
Round letters (O, Q, e, o, 0) read as squarish ovals with softened corners, reinforcing a consistent superellipse theme across caps, lowercase, and figures. The uppercase set has a strong, display-like presence, while the lowercase remains similarly geometric and keeps the same oblique momentum, helping mixed-case lines retain a cohesive, flowing texture.