Sans Superellipse Efnen 15 is a regular weight, narrow, low contrast, italic, tall x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, logos, sports branding, tech ui, posters, futuristic, technical, sporty, sleek, energetic, speed cue, tech tone, compact setting, modern branding, display focus, oblique, rounded corners, squared rounds, angular curves, condensed rhythm.
A condensed oblique sans with a geometric, rounded-rectangle construction. Curves resolve into squared, softened corners, giving bowls and counters a superelliptical feel rather than fully circular forms. Strokes stay even with clean terminals, and many joins lean toward crisp angles, producing a taut, engineered rhythm. Proportions emphasize a tall lowercase with compact counters, while the numerals and capitals maintain the same tight, forward-leaning cadence.
Best used for display roles where its condensed slant and squared-round geometry can signal speed and modernity—headlines, identity marks, esports or automotive-inspired graphics, and product titling. It can also work in interface labels or dashboards when set with generous size and spacing, as the tight apertures and compact counters may reduce clarity at small sizes.
The overall tone is fast and modern, suggesting speed, efficiency, and a tech-forward sensibility. Its rounded-square geometry reads as industrial and controlled rather than friendly, while the slant adds motion and urgency. The result feels well-suited to contemporary, performance-oriented branding.
The design appears intended to merge italic motion with a structured, superelliptical skeleton, creating a streamlined sans that feels engineered and performance-driven. Its consistent stroke weight and rounded-rectangle logic prioritize a cohesive, contemporary voice over calligraphic nuance.
Distinctive details include squared bowls (notably in rounded letters and zeros), a sharp, zig-like ‘s’, and a compact ‘g’ with a strong horizontal base. The ‘w’ and ‘m’ are built from narrow vertical strokes with rounded outer corners, reinforcing the modular, machine-like texture. Apertures tend to be tight, which increases density in longer text settings.