Sans Superellipse Egmy 6 is a regular weight, very narrow, low contrast, italic, normal x-height font visually similar to 'Geogrotesque Condensed Series' and 'Geogrotesque Sharp' by Emtype Foundry (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: headlines, posters, branding, packaging, ui labels, condensed, sleek, technical, modern, energetic, space saving, modernization, speed, clean emphasis, tall, clean, rounded, upright-leaning, linear.
A tall, tightly set sans with an italic slant and low-contrast, monolinear strokes. Letterforms are built from narrow proportions and rounded-rectangle curves, giving bowls and counters a soft, superelliptical feel rather than pure circles. Terminals are clean and mostly straight-cut, with occasional subtle rounding that keeps the texture smooth in lines of text. The overall rhythm is vertical and compact, producing a dense, high-velocity word shape especially in all caps.
Best suited to display contexts where space is tight and impact is needed, such as headlines, posters, editorial titling, and compact branding lockups. It can also work for short UI labels or wayfinding-style text where a sleek, condensed italic voice helps differentiate emphasis, though long passages may feel dense at smaller sizes.
The font reads as contemporary and streamlined, with a forward-leaning, performance-oriented tone. Its condensed stance and rounded geometry add a controlled warmth to an otherwise utilitarian, technical voice. The result feels efficient and modern—more engineered than expressive, but not cold.
The design appears intended to deliver a fast, space-saving italic sans that stays clean and contemporary, using rounded-rectangle construction to maintain smoothness and consistency. It emphasizes compact efficiency and a modern, engineered texture while preserving legibility through open counters and straightforward terminals.
In the sample text, the narrow width creates strong vertical striping and a consistent grayscale, while the rounded curves prevent the italics from feeling brittle. Numerals follow the same compact, upright-leaning construction and maintain the same soft-cornered geometry for visual continuity.