Sans Superellipse Firut 8 is a very bold, wide, medium contrast, italic, tall x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, branding, posters, sports, gaming ui, futuristic, sporty, techy, energetic, playful, display impact, sense of speed, modern geometry, brand voice, rounded, superelliptical, slanted, soft corners, compact apertures.
A heavy, right-slanted sans with superelliptical construction: bowls and counters read as rounded rectangles with softened corners and flattened curves. Strokes feel monolinear with subtle optical modulation, and terminals are consistently rounded, producing a smooth, molded look. Apertures tend toward the closed side, with boxy counters in letters like O, D, P, and Q, and the overall rhythm alternates between broad rounds and tighter, more vertical forms. Numerals and punctuation echo the same rounded-rectangle geometry, maintaining a cohesive, engineered silhouette.
Best suited for display settings such as headlines, logotypes, posters, and short callouts where its bold, rounded-superellipse forms read clearly and create a strong identity. It also fits tech, gaming, and sports-themed graphics, especially where an italicized, forward-leaning voice supports a sense of speed and momentum.
The tone is futuristic and performance-driven, with a streamlined, aerodynamic slant that suggests speed and motion. Its soft-corner geometry keeps it friendly rather than aggressive, landing in a tech-forward, game/sport aesthetic with a slightly playful edge.
The font appears designed to deliver a modern, streamlined display voice built from superelliptical shapes, prioritizing impact, motion, and a cohesive geometric system. Its rounded terminals and boxy counters suggest an intention to feel engineered and contemporary while remaining approachable.
The design language emphasizes squareness-with-rounding over pure circles, giving text a distinctive “capsule” texture in longer lines. Counters and joins are robust and chunky, favoring strong silhouettes and high impact over delicate detail, which can make tight spacing and small sizes feel dense.