Sans Superellipse Fogaj 3 is a bold, normal width, low contrast, italic, normal x-height font visually similar to 'Core Sans N SC' and 'Core Sans NR' by S-Core and 'Bitner' and 'Nauman Neue' by The Northern Block (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: headlines, posters, sports branding, advertising, packaging, sporty, dynamic, modern, assertive, techy, convey motion, maximize impact, modernize geometry, brand clarity, slanted, geometric, rounded, compact, sturdy.
A slanted, heavy sans with geometric construction and smoothly rounded corners. Curves lean toward superelliptic shapes, giving bowls and counters a squarish-round feel, while terminals are clean and unadorned. The stroke weight is even, producing a solid, poster-like texture, and the overall drawing favors compact apertures and sturdy joins. Numerals and capitals read stable and blocky, with a consistent forward angle and a slightly condensed, efficient footprint in text.
Best suited for attention-grabbing headlines, short blocks of copy, and display applications where a strong, energetic slant helps convey speed or emphasis. It should work well in sports and fitness branding, promotional graphics, packaging callouts, and bold UI/wayfinding moments where clarity at larger sizes matters.
The overall tone is energetic and purposeful, with a forward-leaning stance that suggests motion and momentum. Its rounded geometry keeps the voice friendly and contemporary, while the dense weight and tight forms add confidence and impact.
The design appears intended to merge geometric, rounded forms with a forceful forward slant, creating a contemporary display sans that reads quickly and projects motion. Its consistent stroke weight and compact shaping suggest a focus on impact, cohesion, and brandable silhouettes rather than subtle text refinement.
In longer lines the italic rhythm creates a strong directional flow; spacing appears tuned for headline readability rather than delicate typographic color. The rounded-rectangle logic is especially apparent in rounded letters (like O/C/D and the bowls in b/p), reinforcing a cohesive, engineered feel across cases and numerals.