Sans Superellipse Esluf 8 is a bold, normal width, low contrast, italic, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, sports branding, logos, app ui, sporty, dynamic, assertive, retro, techy, impact, speed, branding, modernization, display, slanted, blocky, rounded corners, angular cuts, compact.
A slanted, heavy sans with rounded-rectangle construction and tight, efficient curves. Strokes are thick and largely monolinear, with soft corner rounding paired with sharp, angled cuts at joins and terminals that create a faceted rhythm. Counters tend to be compact and squarish, and the overall silhouettes feel slightly condensed by the forward lean. The italic is built into the letterforms rather than simply being obliqued, giving shapes a purposeful, engineered look.
Best suited to headlines, branding, and short bursts of text where the slanted, high-impact shapes can carry energy and momentum. It works well for sports and automotive-style graphics, tech product marketing, packaging, and bold UI moments such as hero banners or navigation labels. For long-form reading, it’s likely most effective as an accent face rather than body text.
The font conveys speed and impact, balancing muscular weight with streamlined rounding. Its forward-leaning stance and clipped details suggest motion and performance, while the rounded geometry keeps it approachable rather than aggressive. The overall tone lands in a sporty, tech-forward space with a subtle retro display flavor.
The design appears intended to deliver a fast, powerful voice through superelliptic geometry—combining rounded rectangles with decisive angled terminals for a sense of engineered motion. The built-in slant and compact counters prioritize punch, clarity at display sizes, and a cohesive, logo-friendly silhouette.
Uppercase forms read sturdy and geometric, while lowercase keeps the same squared-round logic with simple, compact bowls and short apertures. Numerals are similarly robust and angularly finished, maintaining consistent color and a strong, poster-ready presence. Spacing in the samples appears tuned for headline settings, producing a dense, cohesive texture.