Sans Superellipse Yifa 5 is a very bold, very wide, high contrast, italic, normal x-height font.
Keywords: sports branding, racing graphics, headlines, posters, logos, sporty, aggressive, futuristic, dynamic, industrial, speed cue, impact, modern branding, display emphasis, slanted, oblique, aerodynamic, rounded corners, compact apertures.
A heavy, right-leaning sans with broad proportions and a distinctly aerodynamic stance. Letterforms are built from squared-off superellipse shapes with rounded corners, producing smooth, blocky counters and a tight, machine-cut look. Strokes show noticeable contrast created by the slant and sheared terminals, with many ends finishing in sharp, forward-cut angles. Curves are compressed into rounded rectangles, apertures are relatively closed, and the overall texture reads dark, dense, and fast-moving with a slightly condensed internal spacing.
Best suited to display use where impact and motion are desirable: sports identities, racing and motorsport graphics, fitness branding, packaging callouts, and promotional headlines. It can also work for logos and short, punchy UI labels where a bold, dynamic tone is needed, but is less ideal for long-form text due to its dense weight and closed apertures.
The font projects speed, impact, and modernity, with a tone that feels sporty and assertive. Its sculpted, forward-leaning forms suggest motion and engineered performance rather than neutrality, making the voice energetic and attention-seeking.
The design appears intended to deliver a high-speed, performance-driven aesthetic through wide, rounded-rectangular construction and sharply sheared terminals. By combining soft corners with aggressive cuts and a strong slant, it aims to feel both modern and forceful in large-format typography.
Uppercase and lowercase share a consistent squared-round geometry, helping mixed-case settings feel uniform and sturdy. Numerals follow the same carved, slanted construction, keeping headlines cohesive across alphanumerics. The strong slant and compact openings can reduce clarity at small sizes, but they amplify presence at display scales.