Sans Superellipse Susu 4 is a very bold, normal width, high contrast, italic, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, logos, sports branding, posters, apparel, sporty, aggressive, dynamic, industrial, retro, impact, speed, branding, display, athletic, oblique, condensed feel, rounded corners, ink traps, angular.
A heavy, slanted sans with compact, squared-off counters and consistently rounded corners that create a rounded-rectangle silhouette across the set. Strokes are robust and tightly spaced, with cut-in notches and wedge-like terminals that sharpen the rhythm while preserving softened exterior corners. Curves (notably in C, G, O, Q, and the numerals) read as superelliptical rather than circular, and the joins often show purposeful trimming that functions like ink-trap detailing. The overall texture is dense and forward-leaning, with a mechanical, performance-oriented consistency from capitals through numerals and lowercase.
Best suited to bold headlines, team or event identities, and logo marks where the slanted stance and compact, rounded-rect geometry can read as fast and strong. It also works well for posters, packaging callouts, and apparel graphics that benefit from a dense, high-impact typographic voice. For longer text, it functions most effectively in short bursts such as subheads or emphatic statements.
The font conveys speed and impact, combining a muscular weight with a streamlined, engineered feel. Its slant and angular cut-ins suggest motion and urgency, while the rounded outer geometry keeps it polished rather than brutal. The result is a confident, competitive tone that leans toward motorsport and action-forward branding.
The design appears intended to deliver a high-energy, performance look by blending rounded-rectangle construction with sharpened terminals and strategic notches. The consistent oblique angle and engineered detailing suggest a focus on branding that needs to feel fast, tough, and contemporary while remaining clean and modular.
Distinctive cut-in shapes and asymmetrical trimming give many letters a custom, display-centric personality, especially in forms like J, S, and the numerals. The lowercase maintains the same hard-edged/soft-corner tension as the uppercase, helping longer lines keep a consistent, punchy color.