Sans Superellipse Yidu 2 is a very bold, very wide, high contrast, italic, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, branding, sportswear, posters, packaging, sporty, futuristic, assertive, techy, energetic, high impact, speed cue, modern branding, numeric clarity, systematic forms, oblique, squared-round, streamlined, compact counters, rounded corners.
A heavy, oblique sans with broad proportions and a distinctly squared-round (superellipse) construction. Strokes are thick and tightly controlled, with rounded corners and flattened curves that read like rounded rectangles rather than circles. Counters are compact and often rectangular, producing dense, high-impact silhouettes; the round letters (O, Q, 0, 8, 9) feel more like soft boxes than bowls. Terminals are blunt and clean, with a consistent forward slant and a slightly mechanical rhythm that stays even from caps to figures.
Best suited to display contexts where impact and motion matter: headlines, sports and automotive branding, bold poster typography, packaging, and punchy UI/overlay labels. It performs especially well in short phrases, logos, and numbered systems where the uniform, squared-round forms can carry a strong identity.
The overall tone is fast, forceful, and contemporary—suggesting speed, performance, and tech-forward branding. Its oblique stance and blocky rounding give it a sporty, futuristic character that feels confident and attention-grabbing rather than neutral or bookish.
The letterforms appear designed to deliver a fast, modern look through a forward slant, wide stance, and rounded-rectangle geometry. The intention seems to be a robust, high-visibility sans that stays clean and systematic while projecting speed and strength.
The design favors strong word shapes and bold presence over airy interior space, so spacing and counters read intentionally tight at display sizes. Figures match the same squared-round logic, helping mixed alphanumeric settings look cohesive. The lowercase has a simplified, engineered feel, reinforcing the font’s modern, utilitarian voice.