Sans Superellipse Yema 5 is a very bold, wide, medium contrast, italic, normal x-height font.
Keywords: sports branding, event posters, headlines, app titles, gaming ui, sporty, dynamic, assertive, futuristic, techy, speed emphasis, impact display, modern branding, tech aesthetic, athletic tone, oblique, rounded, compact counters, sheared terminals, tight apertures.
A heavy, oblique sans with broad proportions and rounded-rectangle geometry throughout. Strokes are thick and even with a slight modulation from the slant, and the curves read as softened superellipses rather than pure circles. Terminals are mostly sheared to match the forward angle, producing sharp, aerodynamic corners while keeping the overall silhouette smooth. Counters are relatively compact (notably in B, P, R, a, e, 6, 8, 9), and several letters use tight apertures (C, S, c, e), which reinforces a dense, muscular texture in words. Figures are bold and blocky with clear slant consistency and sturdy, low-detail construction.
Best suited to short, high-impact settings such as sports identities, racing or fitness graphics, esports and gaming surfaces, and energetic advertising headlines. It can also work for UI or product labeling where a strong, forward-leaning display sans is needed, especially at medium-to-large sizes where the tight apertures remain clear.
The font projects speed and impact, with a forward-leaning stance that feels competitive and energetic. Its rounded-square forms and clipped terminals add a modern, engineered tone—confident rather than casual. Overall it reads as a display voice built to look fast, loud, and deliberate.
The design appears intended as an aerodynamic, high-impact display sans that combines rounded-square curves with aggressively slanted terminals to communicate motion and power. Its dense counters and consistent oblique rhythm prioritize a compact, branded look that holds together in bold headlines and logotype-like wordmarks.
Uppercase forms are compact and strongly unified by the same slanted terminal logic, giving headlines a cohesive, angled rhythm. Lowercase keeps a single-storey a and an open, utilitarian construction that favors punch over delicacy; spacing appears tuned for bold setting, with a naturally tight word color in longer lines. The distinctive, squared curves help the face maintain recognizability at a distance and on high-contrast backgrounds.