Sans Superellipse Hidom 8 is a very bold, very narrow, low contrast, upright, tall x-height font visually similar to 'CF Blast Gothic' by Fonts.GR, 'Larrikin' by HeadFirst, 'Hornsea FC' by Studio Fat Cat, 'Tolyer' by Typesketchbook, and 'Winner Sans' by sportsfonts (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: headlines, posters, sports branding, packaging, signage, industrial, authoritative, retro, compressed, punchy, space saving, maximum impact, display clarity, geometric styling, blocky, condensed, geometric, square-rounded, vertical.
A condensed, heavy sans with squared-off counters and rounded-rectangle curves that give letters a superellipse feel. Strokes are uniform and dense, with blunt terminals and a strong vertical emphasis; curves tend to resolve into flat sides rather than true circles. The lowercase shows a tall x-height with compact apertures, and punctuation/dots appear as clean, solid circles. Numerals follow the same sturdy, squared geometry, producing a consistent, poster-ready texture across lines.
Best suited to big, high-impact settings such as headlines, posters, team/sports graphics, and strong brand lockups where a compact width helps fit more characters without losing presence. It can also work well on packaging and signage when you need a loud, sturdy voice and a uniform, blocky texture.
The overall tone is assertive and utilitarian, leaning toward an industrial, sports, and headline-driven aesthetic. Its compressed proportions and solid mass communicate urgency and impact, with a subtle retro signage flavor from the squared curves and blunt endings.
Likely designed to maximize impact in limited horizontal space while maintaining simple, geometric letterforms. The rounded-rectangle construction and blunt terminals suggest an intention toward sturdy legibility at display sizes and a modernized, industrial take on condensed grotesque proportions.
Tight internal spaces and narrow widths create a high-ink, high-density rhythm that stays visually even in long all-caps strings. The squared bowls and small apertures favor bold statements over delicate nuance, and the uniform stroke behavior keeps the texture consistent from caps to lowercase and figures.