Sans Superellipse Supa 9 is a very bold, normal width, medium contrast, italic, tall x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, sports branding, packaging, app titles, sporty, techy, assertive, dynamic, modern, impact, speed cue, modernize, brand voice, display focus, condensed feel, rounded corners, slanted, boxy curves, angular joins.
A slanted sans with a compact, forward-leaning stance and squared-off curves built from rounded-rectangle forms. Strokes are heavy and fairly even, with subtly flattened bowls and corners that read more as soft chamfers than true circles. Terminals are clean and abrupt, and the rhythm is tight, producing a dense texture in words. Lowercase forms show a tall x-height with short extenders, while caps stay narrow and upright in proportion, reinforcing a streamlined silhouette.
Best suited to headlines, titles, and display settings where the strong slant and compact forms can drive a sense of motion. It works well for sports branding, team graphics, event posters, packaging callouts, and UI/app title treatments that need punch and immediacy. Use with ample size and breathing room for the cleanest readability.
The overall tone is fast and purposeful, with a motorsport and performance-graphic energy. Its squared curves and strong slant also give it a contemporary, slightly industrial flavor that feels at home in tech and athletic branding. The weight and compactness make it feel confident and attention-seeking rather than delicate or literary.
The design appears aimed at delivering a high-impact, forward-moving display voice using squared-round geometry and consistent, sturdy strokes. Its proportions and tight texture suggest it was drawn to hold up in bold, short bursts of copy and brand marks where speed and strength are part of the message.
Curved characters keep a consistent superelliptical geometry, so counters stay compact and rectangular in feel. Numerals match the same slanted, squared-round construction, reading clearly and with a unified, engineered look. In text, the combination of heavy strokes and tight spacing creates strong impact but can become visually dense at smaller sizes.