Sans Superellipse Yeba 6 is a very bold, very wide, high contrast, italic, normal x-height font visually similar to 'EF Serpentine Serif' and 'Serpentine EF' by Elsner+Flake, 'Serpentine' and 'Serpentine Sans' by Image Club, and 'Serpentine' by Linotype (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: headlines, posters, sports branding, product packaging, app titles, sporty, techy, assertive, dynamic, retro, impact, speed, branding, display, oblique, extended, rounded, squared, compact apertures.
This typeface is a heavy, oblique sans with extended proportions and a distinctly superelliptical construction. Curves resolve into rounded-rectangle bowls and counters, producing squared-off rounds in letters like O, C, and G and similarly shaped numerals. Strokes are robust and crisp with tight internal spaces, while terminals often cut on a slant, reinforcing forward motion. The rhythm is energetic and compact, with a slightly mechanical geometry that stays consistent across caps, lowercase, and figures.
Best suited for large-scale display uses where impact matters: headlines, posters, sports or esports branding, and bold product or campaign graphics. It can also work for short UI or app title treatments where a compact, forward-leaning emphasis is desirable, but it is less appropriate for long-form reading.
The overall tone is fast, forceful, and modern, with a sporty, performance-oriented attitude. Its slanted stance and dense black shapes read as confident and attention-seeking, leaning toward tech and motorsport aesthetics rather than neutral text typography.
The design appears intended to deliver maximum punch and speed through a wide, oblique stance and superelliptical letterforms. By combining squared rounds with dense weight and slanted terminals, it aims to feel aerodynamic and contemporary while remaining straightforward and highly graphic.
Lowercase forms keep simple, sturdy constructions; the single-storey a and the squared bowls contribute to a utilitarian, engineered feel. Figures are similarly blocky and streamlined, suited to prominent numeric display. The oblique cut and tight counters mean clarity drops quickly at small sizes, especially in dense settings.