Sans Superellipse Yiny 3 is a very bold, very wide, medium contrast, italic, normal x-height font visually similar to '1312 Sugoi' by Ezequiel Filoni and 'Kreak Display' by Tebaltipis Studio (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: sports branding, racing graphics, posters, headlines, logos, racing, athletic, tech, aggressive, futuristic, convey speed, maximize impact, signal performance, stylize headlines, slanted, blocky, rounded, compressed counters, high impact.
A heavy, forward-slanted sans with wide, compact letterforms built from rounded-rectangle geometry. Strokes are thick and uniform with crisp, chamfer-like cuts and frequent horizontal slicing details that create fast-looking breaks in letters such as S, Z, and several numerals. Corners tend to be rounded on the outside while inner counters are tight and squared-off, producing dense, punchy silhouettes. Spacing appears intentionally tight and the forms emphasize low apertures and sturdy terminals for a solid, engineered feel.
Best suited to display work where impact and motion are desirable—sports identities, racing-themed graphics, event posters, esports overlays, and bold hero headlines. It can also work for short UI labels or product marks when a fast, mechanical voice is needed, but the dense counters and stylized cuts suggest keeping it to larger sizes and shorter runs of text.
The overall tone is high-energy and speed-oriented, evoking motorsport graphics and performance branding. Its slant and sliced detailing add urgency and motion, while the blocky construction reads as strong, technical, and competitive.
The font appears designed to communicate speed and power through a consistent italic stance, rounded-rectangular construction, and strategic sliced interruptions that imply motion lines. It prioritizes strong silhouettes and brandable distinctiveness for attention-grabbing titling.
The design leans on consistent angled terminals and cut-in notches that act like built-in highlights, giving the face a custom display character even in plain text. Numerals share the same aerodynamic, segmented treatment, keeping headings and score-like data visually cohesive.