Sans Superellipse Engiz 6 is a bold, wide, low contrast, italic, normal x-height font visually similar to 'Midsole' and 'Midsole SC' by Grype (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: headlines, sports branding, tech ui, posters, titles, sporty, futuristic, technical, assertive, speedy, speed emphasis, modern branding, tech aesthetic, display impact, oblique, squared, rounded corners, extended, streamlined.
A forward-leaning sans with broad, extended proportions and a distinctly squared, superellipse construction. Strokes are heavy and even, with rounded corners and smooth joins that keep the geometry feeling continuous rather than mechanical. Counters tend toward rounded-rectangle openings, and terminals are predominantly flat with subtle angle cuts that reinforce the slanted momentum. Overall spacing reads open and stable in caps, while the lowercase keeps a compact, engineered rhythm with single-storey forms and crisp, simplified details.
Best suited to bold headlines, logotypes, and short callouts where its extended width and oblique drive can set a fast, modern voice. It also fits tech and gaming visuals—dashboards, interface-style graphics, and promotional materials—where squared-rounded geometry and strong weight improve clarity and impact.
The design projects motion and modernity, evoking motorsport, sci‑fi interfaces, and performance branding. Its slant and widened stance create an energetic, confident tone that feels competitive and high-tech rather than friendly or literary.
The font appears designed to deliver a streamlined, performance-oriented look using rounded-rectangle geometry, combining strong presence with a controlled, engineered feel. The consistent slant and wide set suggest an emphasis on speed, display impact, and contemporary branding versatility.
Figures follow the same squared-rounded logic for strong visual consistency, with angular joins and flattened curves that keep shapes tight at display sizes. The oblique angle is pronounced enough to read as dynamic in headlines, yet the letterforms remain clean and systematic for short blocks of text.