Sans Superellipse Kisy 2 is a bold, very wide, low contrast, italic, normal x-height font.
Keywords: branding, headlines, posters, sportswear, gaming ui, futuristic, techy, sporty, sleek, dynamic, modernize, signal speed, tech aesthetic, display impact, rounded, extended, oblique, streamlined, squared.
A rounded, extended sans with a forward slant and consistently heavy strokes. Letterforms are built from softened rectangles and superellipse-like curves, producing squared counters and corners that read as aerodynamic rather than geometric. Terminals are smoothly rounded, joins are clean, and curves stay taut, creating an even, low-modulation rhythm. The forms feel deliberately wide with generous horizontal spans, while counters remain open enough for clear word shapes; numerals follow the same rounded-rect logic and maintain a cohesive, engineered texture.
Works best for logos, branding systems, and high-impact headlines where its extended proportions and streamlined shapes can set a strong voice. It also suits posters, product packaging, and sports/tech marketing, as well as interface headings in games or dashboards where a futuristic, engineered feel is desired.
The overall tone is modern and performance-oriented, with a distinctly digital, sci‑fi edge. Its wide stance and oblique motion suggest speed and confidence, making it feel at home in technology, motorsport, and gaming-adjacent aesthetics.
The design appears intended to combine a robust, contemporary sans foundation with superellipse-based rounding and a pronounced forward slant to communicate speed, technology, and modernity. Its consistent construction across letters and numbers suggests a focus on cohesive display typography for identity and attention-grabbing messaging.
Distinctive details include boxy bowls and apertures (especially in characters like C, G, O, and e) and a consistent use of softened right angles that keeps the design cohesive across caps, lowercase, and figures. The slant is strong enough to convey motion without becoming cursive, supporting both display settings and short UI-style headlines.