Sans Superellipse Kevi 10 is a bold, normal width, low contrast, italic, normal x-height font.
Keywords: sports branding, esports, posters, headlines, logos, sporty, techy, dynamic, retro, speed cue, impact display, industrial feel, distinctiveness, slanted, squared, rounded corners, stencil-like, angular terminals.
A slanted sans with a squared, superelliptical skeleton: bowls and counters read as rounded rectangles, while joins and terminals are cut with crisp, angled shears. Strokes are consistently heavy with minimal modulation, and many letters include small notch-like cut-ins that create a subtle stencil/inline feel without breaking the overall solidity. Curves are tightened and flattened at the extremes, producing compact, aerodynamic forms; diagonals are prominent and the rhythm is forward-leaning. Numerals follow the same geometry, with blocky, rounded-rectangle silhouettes and sharp, engineered corners.
Best suited to short, high-impact settings such as sports or motorsport branding, esports identities, event posters, packaging callouts, and punchy headline typography. It can also work for UI or product graphics where a dynamic, engineered voice is desired, especially at medium-to-large sizes where the cut details stay clear.
The overall tone is fast, assertive, and mechanical, combining a sporty race aesthetic with a slightly retro arcade or sci‑fi flavor. Its slant and chamfered cuts suggest motion and performance, while the squared curves keep it feeling modern and industrial.
The design appears intended to deliver a sense of speed and precision through superelliptical construction, strong slant, and chamfered terminals. The notch-like cuts add distinctive texture and help differentiate letterforms, aiming for a bold, high-energy display voice rather than quiet text neutrality.
Counters tend to be rectangular and open cleanly at display sizes, but the numerous angled cuts and tight internal spaces can visually crowd at smaller settings. The italic construction appears built-in rather than a simple oblique, giving the forms a deliberate, custom-forward stance.