Sans Superellipse Isfu 2 is a very bold, very wide, low contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, logos, packaging, gaming ui, techno, industrial, playful, retro, display impact, geometric system, tech feel, brand presence, rounded, blocky, geometric, squared, soft corners.
A heavy, geometric sans built from rounded-rectangle and superellipse forms, with squared counters and consistently softened corners. Strokes stay uniform with minimal modulation, producing a dense, compact color and a strongly horizontal rhythm. Curves tend to resolve into flat terminals and boxy shoulders, and round letters read as squarish ovals rather than circles. Counters are relatively small and rectangular, and the overall construction favors sturdy silhouettes over delicate interior detail.
Best suited to headlines, posters, and branding where a bold, geometric voice is desirable. It also fits packaging and product marks that benefit from sturdy, rounded industrial forms, and works well in gaming or interface-style graphics where a techno, modular texture is appropriate.
The tone is bold and synthetic, balancing a friendly softness from the rounded corners with an assertive, engineered presence. It evokes arcade and sci‑fi interfaces as well as industrial labeling, giving text a confident, tech-leaning character. The exaggerated geometry and tight counters add a touch of playful retro futurism while staying straightforward and legible at display sizes.
The design appears intended to deliver maximum impact through simplified, superelliptical geometry and uniform stroke weight. By replacing traditional roundness with rounded-rectangular construction and tight, squared counters, it aims for a distinctive, systemized look that remains approachable while reading as modern and engineered.
Spacing appears intentionally tight, which helps create a strong headline block but can make dense text feel packed. Several shapes emphasize squarish bowls and rectangular apertures, reinforcing the font’s modular, UI-like feel. Numerals and capitals share the same rounded-rectilinear logic, keeping the system visually cohesive across alphanumerics.