Sans Superellipse Imlih 10 is a very bold, very wide, low contrast, italic, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, sports branding, gaming ui, tech branding, futuristic, sporty, tech, dynamic, aggressive, impact, speed cueing, modern branding, display legibility, tech styling, rounded, squared, extended, streamlined, stencil-like.
A forward-leaning sans with extended proportions and heavy, uniform strokes. Many forms are built from rounded rectangles and soft-cornered superelliptic curves, producing squared counters in letters like O and D and a sleek, engineered silhouette. Terminals are clean and mostly horizontal, with occasional cut-in notches and open apertures that give several glyphs a subtly segmented, stencil-like feel. The rhythm is wide and low, with compact ascenders/descenders relative to the overall width and a consistent, monoline construction throughout.
Best suited to large-scale applications where its wide stance and engineered curves can read clearly: headlines, event posters, esports and motorsport branding, product logos, and interface titling for games or tech. It can also work for short labels and packaging callouts, but is likely too forceful for dense body copy.
The overall tone is fast, technical, and performance-oriented—more motorsport and sci‑fi interface than editorial or literary. Its slanted stance and squared-round geometry suggest speed and precision, while the chunky weight keeps it assertive and attention-grabbing.
This design appears intended to deliver a high-impact, speed-coded voice using superelliptic construction and a consistent, heavy stroke. The italic slant and streamlined detailing emphasize motion, while the squared-round counters keep the style coherent across caps, lowercase, and figures.
In longer text the letterspacing and wide set create a strong horizontal flow, while distinctive details (like the open-bar styling in some letters and the squared bowls) add character but can become visually busy at smaller sizes. Numerals match the same rounded-rect geometry and feel display-focused rather than neutral.