Sans Superellipse Dyho 4 is a regular weight, very wide, medium contrast, italic, normal x-height font.
Keywords: tech branding, automotive, sportswear, ui headings, packaging, futuristic, technical, sleek, sporty, aerodynamic, convey speed, modernize tone, tech aesthetic, streamlined branding, rounded corners, obround forms, extended, oblique, monolinear.
An oblique, extended sans with a smooth superellipse construction: corners are consistently rounded and bowls tend toward rounded-rectangle shapes rather than perfect circles. Strokes read largely monolinear with subtle modulation, and terminals are clean and linear, often finishing with a slight forward-cut feel that reinforces motion. The overall rhythm is wide and horizontal, with open counters and generous apertures; diagonals and joins are crisp, giving the face a precise, engineered look. Numerals follow the same oblique, rounded-rect logic, with a streamlined “0” and a geometric “8” built from stacked rounded forms.
Best suited for display roles where its wide, slanted stance can communicate motion—such as technology and gaming identities, automotive or transportation graphics, and sports/performance branding. It can also work for UI or product headings and short blocks of marketing copy where a sleek, modern texture is desired.
The font conveys speed and modernity, with a controlled, aerodynamic tone typical of tech and performance-oriented branding. Its rounded geometry keeps it approachable while the slant and extended proportions push it toward a forward-looking, high-tech aesthetic.
The letterforms appear designed to blend geometric precision with friendly rounding, producing a streamlined oblique voice that feels contemporary and performance-driven. The repeated superellipse shapes suggest an intention to echo industrial design language—devices, interfaces, and engineered products—while staying clean and legible in display sizes.
The design maintains strong consistency across uppercase, lowercase, and figures through repeated rounded-rectangle motifs and uniform corner radii. The oblique angle is prominent enough to act as a stylistic signature, and the extended set width creates a distinctive, space-age texture in lines of text.