Sans Superellipse Erfy 1 is a very bold, normal width, monoline, italic, normal x-height font.
Keywords: sports branding, racing graphics, esports, headlines, posters, sporty, futuristic, industrial, assertive, energetic, impact, speed, modernity, brand presence, tech tone, rounded corners, squared bowls, oblique slant, compact apertures, high contrast of shape.
A heavy, obliqued sans with rounded-rectangle construction and tightly controlled geometry. Strokes maintain a consistent thickness while corners are softened into squarish radii, creating superelliptical bowls in letters like O, D, and Q. Counters are compact and often squared, with short apertures and clipped-looking terminals that emphasize a blocky, engineered feel. Uppercase forms are broad and stable, while lowercase keeps a relatively straightforward build with a single-storey a and g, and a tall, simple l; figures are similarly boxy with rounded corners and clear, stencil-free interiors.
Best suited for bold display typography where impact and motion are desired—sports identities, motorsport/racing graphics, esports titles, tech-forward posters, and packaging accents. It can also work for short UI labels or section headers when a strong, engineered voice is needed, but its dense counters favor larger sizes.
The overall tone is fast, mechanical, and confident—suggesting speed, performance, and modern tech. Its slanted stance and compact counters project urgency and momentum, while the softened corners keep the voice contemporary rather than harsh.
The letterforms appear designed to combine maximum visual weight with streamlined, aerodynamic shapes. Rounded-rectangle geometry and consistent stroke logic aim for a contemporary industrial aesthetic that reads as fast and purposeful in branding and promotional typography.
The design leans on flat horizontal cuts and squared-off joins, which gives word shapes a strong, rhythmic texture in display settings. The oblique angle is consistent across caps, lowercase, and numerals, supporting cohesive branding when mixed in headlines and short lines of copy.