Sans Superellipse Pomol 2 is a very bold, very narrow, monoline, upright, normal x-height font visually similar to 'Kicker FC' by Arkitype, 'Nomad Display' by Designova, 'Clinch' by Gerald Gallo, 'Cheap Pine' by HVD Fonts, and 'Milky Bar' by Malgorzata Bartosik (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: headlines, posters, signage, logotypes, packaging, condensed, industrial, modernist, poster-ready, utilitarian, space-saving, high impact, systematic, signage-ready, rounded-rect, blocky, compact, high-contrast (mass), stencil-like (counter).
A condensed sans with heavy, uniform strokes and a compact horizontal footprint. Curves are built from rounded-rectangle geometry, giving bowls and counters a squared, superelliptical feel rather than true circles. Terminals are mostly blunt and vertical, with occasional tight apertures and narrow interior counters that emphasize a strong, columnar rhythm. The lowercase keeps a straightforward, functional structure, while the figures and capitals maintain consistent width and weight for a solid, tightly packed texture in lines of text.
Best suited for headlines, posters, and large-scale display where its condensed width and heavy strokes deliver high impact. It can work well for branding, packaging, and signage systems that need compact copy with a strong, industrial voice.
The overall tone is assertive and utilitarian, combining a technical, industrial clarity with a bold headline presence. Its tall, compressed silhouettes and squared-round curves evoke modern signage and engineered branding rather than warmth or calligraphy.
Likely designed to provide an emphatic condensed display sans that maximizes presence while conserving horizontal space. The superelliptical construction and blunt terminals suggest an intention toward consistent, modular shapes that reproduce reliably in bold applications.
The narrow counters and compressed spacing create strong vertical striping at text sizes, which reads cleanly at large scales and becomes dense as lines get longer. Round letters (like O/C-style forms) retain a distinctive rounded-rectangle profile that stays consistent across capitals, lowercase, and numerals.