Sans Superellipse Fikow 15 is a bold, wide, low contrast, italic, normal x-height font.
Keywords: sports branding, headlines, posters, gaming ui, tech packaging, futuristic, sporty, technical, aggressive, sleek, speed, impact, modernity, tech tone, branding, oblique, extended, geometric, square-round, aerodynamic.
A heavy, obliqued sans with extended proportions and a geometric, squared-off construction. Curves resolve into rounded-rectangle (superellipse-like) forms, giving bowls and counters a softened, engineered look rather than purely circular geometry. Stroke weight is broadly uniform with crisp terminals, frequent angled cuts, and occasional horizontal “speed” bars in select letters and numerals, reinforcing a directional rhythm. Spacing reads generous for a display face, and the slant is consistent across caps, lowercase, and figures, producing a forward-leaning texture.
Best suited to short-to-medium display settings where its slant, width, and graphic cut terminals can read at a glance: sports identities, event posters, product marks, gaming/stream overlays, and tech or automotive packaging. It can also work for UI headings or dashboards where a bold, directional tone is desirable, but its stylization makes it less appropriate for long-form text.
The overall tone feels fast, modern, and performance-oriented—like industrial design, motorsport branding, or sci‑fi interface typography. Its blocky curves and slanted stance convey energy and momentum, while the clean geometry keeps it firmly in a contemporary, technical register.
The design appears intended to project speed and modernity through an oblique stance, extended width, and engineered superellipse curves. The angled terminals and occasional inline bars act as visual cues for motion and machinery, aiming for high-impact branding and display readability.
Uppercase forms are compact and forceful, while the lowercase introduces distinctive, stylized details (notably in a, e, and g) that push the voice toward branding rather than neutral text. Numerals share the same squared-round geometry and angled cuts, helping the set feel cohesive for scoreboard-like or UI readouts.