Sans Superellipse Esrif 4 is a bold, normal width, low contrast, italic, normal x-height font visually similar to 'Cybersport' by Anton Kokoshka (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: sports branding, racing graphics, gaming ui, tech posters, headlines, futuristic, sporty, technical, dynamic, aggressive, speed, impact, sci-fi feel, brand distinctiveness, display clarity, oblique, squared, rounded corners, compressed terminals, angular joins.
A slanted sans with squared, superellipse-like counters and rounded-rectangle curves throughout. Strokes are sturdy and largely monoline, with crisp, chamfered corners and short wedge-like terminals that give many letters a forward-cut profile. Curves are built from flattened arcs rather than perfect circles, producing a boxy-yet-soft geometry in C/G/O/Q and the numerals. The overall rhythm is compact and energetic, with consistent slant and tight internal shaping that emphasizes speed and mechanical precision.
Well-suited to sports and motorsport identity work, gaming and streaming overlays, tech-forward posters, and bold headline treatments where motion and impact are desired. It can also work for short UI labels or packaging callouts when set with ample size and spacing to preserve clarity.
The design reads as fast, engineered, and performance-oriented, blending retro digital cues with a modern racing sensibility. Its sharp cuts and forward lean create urgency and motion, while the rounded-rectangle construction keeps the tone controlled and technical rather than playful.
The font appears intended to deliver a high-impact, speed-driven voice using a consistent rounded-rectangle geometry and oblique stance. Its letterforms prioritize distinctive silhouette and forward momentum, aiming for branding and display contexts where a technical, performance aesthetic is central.
Capitals show a strong display presence with distinctive, squared bowls (notably in B, D, P, R) and a stylized G and Q that reinforce the geometric system. Lowercase maintains the same construction, with single-storey forms and compact apertures that can feel dense at smaller sizes but look striking at headline scale. Numerals follow the same boxy curvature and angled terminals for a cohesive set.