Sans Superellipse Sujy 4 is a very bold, very narrow, medium contrast, italic, tall x-height font.
Keywords: posters, sports branding, headlines, packaging, logos, sporty, urgent, retro, industrial, assertive, space saving, high impact, speed feel, display focus, geometric consistency, condensed, slanted, superelliptical, rounded corners, tall lowercase.
A condensed, forward-slanted sans with superelliptical construction: rounded-rectangle bowls, softened corners, and mostly straight, vertical strokes that taper into curved terminals. The letterforms are tall and tightly fit, with narrow counters and a compact rhythm that reads as engineered rather than calligraphic. Round characters like O and 0 appear more like vertical capsules than circles, while diagonals and joins stay crisp and controlled, producing a dense, high-impact texture in text. Numerals and capitals follow the same narrow, upright-skeleton logic, keeping widths disciplined while maintaining clear silhouettes.
Best suited to short, high-impact settings such as posters, sports or fitness branding, product packaging, and punchy headlines where a compressed, kinetic look is desired. It can also work for logos and wordmarks that benefit from a tall, streamlined silhouette, but it’s less ideal for long-form reading due to the dense texture and tight counters.
The overall tone is fast and forceful, suggesting motion and pressure through the steep slant and compressed proportions. It carries a sporty, poster-driven energy with a slightly retro, industrial edge—confident, loud, and attention-seeking rather than quiet or bookish.
The font appears designed to deliver maximum impact in minimal horizontal space, combining a strong slant with rounded-rectangle forms for a modernized, speed-oriented aesthetic. Its consistent geometry suggests an intention to feel both technical and energetic, optimized for display typography where shape and momentum are central.
The narrow apertures and tight internal spacing create strong black shapes at display sizes, while the heavy stroke weight can reduce interior clarity in smaller settings. The design’s consistent rounded-rectangle geometry gives it a cohesive, technical feel across upper- and lowercase as well as figures.