Sans Superellipse Yepy 5 is a very bold, very wide, high contrast, italic, normal x-height font.
Keywords: sports branding, racing livery, headlines, posters, logos, racing, futuristic, sporty, techno, aggressive, impact, speed, modernity, branding, display, oblique, compressed counters, rounded corners, slab-like cuts, angular joins.
A heavy, right-leaning sans with wide proportions and a distinctly engineered shape language. Strokes are thick and tightly enclosed, with small, squarish counters and rounded-rectangle curves that read as superelliptic rather than circular. Terminals are predominantly cut on angles, creating wedge-like ends and a fast forward slant, while corners stay smoothly rounded, keeping the forms compact and cohesive. The rhythm is punchy and dense, with strong horizontal emphasis and simplified, blocky geometry that remains consistent across uppercase, lowercase, and numerals.
Best suited for display use where immediate impact matters: athletic and esports identities, racing-themed graphics, bold headlines, posters, packaging callouts, and short UI labels in games or tech contexts. It performs particularly well when set large or with generous tracking to preserve interior clarity.
The overall tone is speedy and competitive, evoking motorsport graphics, sci‑fi interfaces, and performance branding. Its oblique stance and sharp cuts add urgency and impact, while the rounded-square construction keeps it feeling modern and manufactured rather than handwritten or retro.
The design appears intended to deliver maximum visual force with a streamlined, aerodynamic feel. By combining rounded-rectangle curves with angular cut terminals and a strong slant, it targets contemporary performance and technology aesthetics while maintaining a consistent, modular construction.
Uppercase shapes are especially squared-off and compact, with counters that can close up quickly in smaller sizes. Numerals and lowercase share the same slanted, chiseled finishing, giving mixed-case settings a uniform, logo-like texture. The design favors silhouette strength over interior openness, which increases presence in short bursts.