Sans Superellipse Enkoh 8 is a regular weight, wide, low contrast, italic, normal x-height font.
Keywords: sports branding, tech branding, transportation, headlines, posters, futuristic, technical, sporty, sleek, dynamic, convey motion, modernize, signal precision, brand impact, tech aesthetic, rounded corners, oblique slant, streamlined, geometric, angular joins.
A slanted, geometric sans with a distinctly rounded-rectangle construction: curves resolve into softened corners and flattened arcs rather than pure circles. Strokes are even and clean, with crisp terminals that often feel cut on an angle, reinforcing forward motion. Proportions are roomy and horizontally expansive, with open counters and a compact, efficient rhythm that stays consistent from caps to lowercase and figures. Numerals and capitals share the same squared-round logic, giving the set a cohesive, engineered look.
Best suited to short-to-medium display settings where its slanted, streamlined shapes can project speed and modernity—such as sports identities, technology products, automotive/transportation graphics, and bold editorial headlines. It can also work for UI or interface headings when a futuristic, performance-forward tone is desired.
The overall tone is fast, modern, and tech-oriented, with a controlled, aerodynamic feel. Its oblique posture and softened geometry suggest motion and precision rather than warmth or calligraphy, landing in a contemporary, performance-minded register.
The design appears intended to blend geometric efficiency with softened, superelliptical rounding, producing a contemporary italicized sans that feels engineered and motion-driven. Its consistent stroke behavior and rounded-rectangle construction suggest a focus on brandable, high-impact display use with clear, modern letterforms.
Distinctive rounded-corner geometry shows up across key shapes (for example in C, O, Q, and the bowls of B and P), while diagonals and joins stay sharp and taut. The sample text demonstrates strong line continuity at larger sizes, where the slant and rounded-rect forms read as a unified visual system.