Sans Superellipse Udray 2 is a bold, normal width, low contrast, italic, normal x-height font.
Keywords: sports branding, headlines, posters, gaming ui, team apparel, sporty, techy, dynamic, futuristic, industrial, convey speed, look modern, maximize impact, feel engineered, rounded corners, condensed feel, slanted, geometric, compact.
A slanted sans with compact proportions and a strong, steady stroke that maintains an even color across lines of text. Curves and counters are built from rounded-rectangle geometry, producing squared bowls and soft corners rather than circular forms. Terminals tend to be blunt and horizontal, with occasional angled cuts that reinforce forward motion. Spacing is tight and efficient, and the overall rhythm is structured and mechanical, staying consistent from caps to numerals.
Best suited to display contexts where impact and motion are desirable: sports identities, performance-themed branding, esports and gaming interfaces, posters, and bold editorial headings. It can work in short bursts of text as shown, but the dense spacing and strong slant make it most effective at larger sizes, on signage, or for UI labels where quick recognition matters.
The font reads fast, assertive, and purpose-built, with a forward-leaning tone that suggests speed and performance. Its rounded-rectangular construction adds a contemporary, tech-influenced flavor, while the heavy presence keeps it loud and confident. The result feels sporty and modern rather than elegant or casual.
The design appears intended to deliver a fast, modern voice through an italic stance and rounded-rectangular geometry, combining mechanical precision with softened corners. It prioritizes punchy readability and a cohesive, engineered silhouette across letters and numbers for high-energy branding and on-screen use.
Many letters show boxy counters and squared-off rounds (notably in characters like O, D, Q, and 0), creating a distinctive superellipse signature. The lowercase is similarly constructed and compact, keeping the texture dense in paragraphs; the numerals match the same angular-rounded logic for a cohesive alphanumeric set.