Sans Superellipse Yiny 6 is a very bold, very wide, high contrast, italic, normal x-height font visually similar to 'Kreak Display' by Tebaltipis Studio (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: sports branding, esports, posters, headlines, logos, sporty, futuristic, aggressive, techy, dynamic, impact, speed, tech, branding, display, slanted, angular, rounded corners, compact counters, industrial.
A heavily slanted, geometric sans built from chunky rounded-rectangle forms with sharply cut internal corners and wedge-like terminals. Strokes are thick and tightly controlled, with compact counters and frequent stencil-like notches or breaks that carve horizontal slices through letters such as S and G and appear as small rectangular apertures in A, O, P, and R. Curves read as superelliptical—more like rounded boxes than true circles—while joins and diagonals are crisp, producing a fast, mechanical rhythm. Spacing and widths vary by character, but the overall texture stays dense and blocky, emphasizing forward motion and impact.
Best suited to short, high-impact settings such as sports identities, esports teams, event posters, product names, and attention-grabbing headlines. It will also work for titles in tech or automotive contexts where a fast, engineered look is desired; the dense shapes and cut-in details favor larger sizes over long text.
The face conveys speed and force, with a motorsport-and-arcade energy that feels engineered rather than expressive. Its italic slant and cut-in details suggest motion, machinery, and competitive intensity, making the tone bold, assertive, and slightly sci‑fi.
The design appears intended as an impact-forward display sans that merges rounded-rectangle geometry with aggressive, speed-oriented italics. The consistent notching and compact counters suggest a goal of creating a distinctive, industrial signature that reads as modern and performance-driven.
The notched cutaways are a defining motif that adds a technical, segmented feel and helps differentiate similar shapes at display sizes. Numerals follow the same squared, slanted construction, keeping the set cohesive for branding or scoreboard-like applications.