Sans Superellipse Nehy 11 is a very bold, wide, medium contrast, upright, tall x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, logos, branding, packaging, industrial, techno, arcade, blocky, playful, impact, retro-future, signage, game feel, mechanical, rounded corners, modular, geometric, compact counters, squared curves.
A heavy, modular display sans built from rounded-rectangle and superellipse-like forms. Strokes are uniformly thick with softly chamfered corners, producing a sturdy, stamped silhouette. Counters are small and rectilinear, often appearing as narrow slots, and curves are treated as squared-off bowls rather than true circles. The overall rhythm is wide and dense, with minimal interior whitespace and a consistent, grid-based construction that keeps shapes crisp and mechanical.
This face is best suited to short, high-impact settings such as headlines, posters, logotypes, brand marks, and packaging where its chunky geometry can dominate the layout. It also works well for game titles, tech/event graphics, and signage-style compositions that benefit from a bold, constructed look. For long text or small UI sizes, the tight counters may reduce clarity compared with more open designs.
The tone is bold and extroverted, blending an industrial, machine-made feel with retro arcade and sci‑fi signage cues. Its rounded corners soften the mass, keeping it approachable while still reading as tough and technical. The result feels energetic, game-like, and strongly graphic.
The design appears intended as a strongly geometric display sans that prioritizes presence and a consistent, grid-built construction. Rounded-square curves and slot-like counters suggest an aim for a retro-futuristic, arcade-inspired voice that remains clean and contemporary.
Many glyphs show deliberate angular cut-ins and notches (for example in bowls and joins), reinforcing a fabricated, modular aesthetic. The numerals match the same blocky logic and read best at larger sizes where the tight counters and slot-like apertures stay clear.