Sans Superellipse Morod 6 is a very bold, very narrow, low contrast, italic, tall x-height font visually similar to 'Masifa' and 'Masifa Rounded' by Hurufatfont and 'Entropia' by Slava Antipov (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: headlines, posters, branding, packaging, sportswear, sporty, retro, urgent, energetic, industrial, impact, motion, space-saving, signage, condensed, rounded, oblique, compact, soft corners.
A condensed oblique sans with heavy, compact forms and consistently rounded corners that give the strokes a soft, superelliptical feel. Curves and terminals are blunted rather than sharp, and counters stay relatively small, producing a dense, high-ink texture. The rhythm is upright in construction but strongly slanted, with smooth joins and simplified shapes that favor sturdy silhouettes over delicate detail.
Best suited to short, high-impact settings such as headlines, posters, logos, packaging fronts, and campaign lockups where a condensed, slanted voice helps maximize presence in limited width. It also fits sports and fitness branding, event graphics, and product marks that benefit from a sense of speed and pressure. For longer passages, it works more reliably as display text rather than body copy due to the dense counters and compact proportions.
The overall tone is fast, punchy, and assertive, with a slanted posture that implies motion and emphasis. Its rounded geometry keeps the voice friendly enough to avoid harshness, but the dense weight and compression push it toward bold, attention-grabbing messaging. The result feels at home in energetic, performance-oriented, and slightly retro contexts.
The design appears aimed at delivering a strong, space-efficient display sans with a built-in sense of motion. Rounded superelliptical construction and blunt terminals suggest an intention to balance toughness with approachability, keeping forms robust and highly legible in bold applications. Overall it looks optimized for impactful, modern signage and branding where a condensed footprint is an advantage.
Round letters show squared-off, rounded-rectangle bowls, while straight-sided characters keep a streamlined, engineered feel. Numerals and capitals read as compact and uniform, and the lowercase maintains a consistent slant with minimal flourish, supporting clear blocks of emphasized text. The font’s tight interior spaces suggest it performs best with adequate tracking and generous line spacing at smaller sizes.