Sans Superellipse Jirik 2 is a very bold, narrow, monoline, upright, tall x-height font visually similar to 'Horesport' by Mightyfire (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: headlines, posters, logos, packaging, game ui, retro, techno, industrial, game-like, futuristic, display impact, tech styling, retro signage, compact presence, graphic voice, squared, rounded, chunky, compact, geometric.
A heavy, compact sans built from rounded-rectangle geometry, with squarish bowls and softened corners throughout. Strokes are uniform and substantial, creating a strong, blocky texture with tight internal counters and short apertures. Curves resolve into superellipse-like turns rather than circular arcs, and terminals tend to end in flat, squared cuts with consistent rounding. The overall rhythm is condensed and vertically emphatic, producing a dense, poster-ready silhouette in both caps and lowercase.
Best suited to short, high-impact settings such as headlines, posters, branding marks, and packaging where its dense weight and squared-round character read as intentional styling. It also fits on-screen contexts like game UI, sci-fi interfaces, and title cards where a bold, techno-leaning voice is desired.
The font projects a retro-futurist, arcade/scoreboard energy—mechanical and confident, with a distinctly digital-industrial flavor. Its chunky forms feel utilitarian and engineered, while the rounded corners keep the tone approachable rather than harsh.
The design appears aimed at delivering maximum presence with a compact footprint, using rounded-rect construction to evoke digital signage and retro-tech aesthetics. It prioritizes graphic consistency and a distinctive silhouette for display typography over neutral, long-form text color.
Distinctive, squared numerals and angular diagonals (notably in letters like K, V, W, X, Y) reinforce a constructed, modular feel. The punctuation and dot forms follow the same rounded-rect language, helping text blocks keep a consistent, stenciled-tech texture at display sizes.