Sans Superellipse Yogi 9 is a very bold, very wide, medium contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, logotypes, posters, packaging, gaming ui, techy, futuristic, playful, chunky, retro, impact, modernity, tech tone, geometric cohesion, brandability, rounded corners, soft geometry, square counters, blocky, compact apertures.
A heavy, rounded-rectilinear sans with a pronounced superellipse construction: strokes and curves resolve into softened corners and squared-off bowls. Letterforms are built from broad, even strokes with tight internal counters and mostly closed apertures, producing a dense, compact texture. Terminals are blunt and consistently radiused, and many curves (notably in C, G, S, and a) feel more like shaped cutouts than traditional circular forms. Spacing and rhythm read sturdy and stable, with a geometric, modular feel that stays consistent across caps, lowercase, and numerals.
Best suited to short, high-impact settings such as headlines, posters, brand marks, and packaging where its chunky geometry can lead the visual hierarchy. It also fits game and tech-themed interfaces, titles, and signage-style graphics where a futuristic, modular voice is desired; longer text will read more comfortably at larger sizes due to the tight counters and compact apertures.
The overall tone is bold and engineered, with a distinctly tech-forward and slightly retro arcade flavor. Its softened corners keep it friendly and approachable, while the squared counters and compact openings add a utilitarian, sci‑fi edge. The result feels confident, playful, and attention-grabbing rather than refined or delicate.
The font appears designed to deliver a distinctive, modular geometric voice built on rounded-rectangle forms, prioritizing bold presence and a cohesive superellipse system across the character set. Its consistent corner radii, squared counters, and dense interior spaces suggest an intention to feel engineered and contemporary while remaining approachable through softened edges.
The design emphasizes silhouette clarity over open counters: forms like e, s, and c have narrow openings, and the interior shapes in letters such as O, Q, and 8 read as rounded-square cutouts. Diagonals in V, W, X, and Z are thick and angular, reinforcing the constructed, display-oriented personality. Numerals follow the same blocky logic, with the 0 and 8 especially consistent in their squared counter shapes.