Sans Superellipse Lafy 11 is a regular weight, wide, low contrast, italic, normal x-height font.
Keywords: sports branding, technology ui, gaming titles, automotive, posters, futuristic, technical, sporty, sleek, digital, speed, modern tech, streamlined identity, display clarity, rounded, monoline, superelliptic, streamlined, angular rounds.
A slanted, monoline sans built from rounded-rectangle and superellipse geometry. Strokes maintain an even thickness with soft, squared terminals and consistent corner radii, producing a smooth “capsule” rhythm across letters and numerals. Counters are mostly rectangular with rounded corners, and many joins favor continuous curves over sharp intersections, creating a clean, engineered silhouette. The overall fit is open and extended, with a forward-leaning stance and slightly modular proportions that keep the alphabet feeling uniform while still clearly differentiated.
Best suited to display settings where a sleek, technical voice is desired: sports and performance branding, gaming and esports graphics, automotive or motorsport materials, and technology-facing UI or product marketing. It can also work for short bursts of text in posters or packaging where the geometric texture is part of the visual identity.
The design reads as modern and kinetic, with a sci‑fi/tech sensibility that suggests speed and precision. Its rounded-square construction gives it a contemporary, device-like character—cool, controlled, and slightly retro-futurist—without feeling decorative.
The font appears designed to deliver a fast, modern tone through superelliptic construction and a steady monoline stroke, prioritizing a unified, engineered look and strong on-screen presence. The slant and rounded-square counters aim to communicate motion and contemporary tech culture while keeping letterforms clean and readable at display sizes.
Distinctive forms include boxy rounded bowls (e.g., in B, 8, 0/9) and simplified, aerodynamic diagonals that reinforce the forward motion. The lowercase maintains the same geometric logic as the capitals, keeping a consistent, system-like texture in paragraphs and headlines.