Sans Superellipse Juda 4 is a very bold, narrow, high contrast, italic, normal x-height font visually similar to 'Rice' by Font Kitchen, 'Chreed' by Glyphminds Studios, 'Daimon' by TypeClassHeroes, and 'Crossfit' and 'Crossfit Core' by TypeThis!Studio (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: headlines, posters, sports branding, packaging, signage, urgent, sporty, industrial, aggressive, retro, impact, speed, compression, attention, condensed, slanted, blocky, rounded, compact.
A compact, strongly slanted sans with heavy, sculpted strokes and rounded-rectangle counters. Curves are tightened into superelliptical forms, while terminals are mostly flat and blunt, giving a cut-from-solid, poster-ready silhouette. The interior spaces are narrow and consistently shaped, and the overall rhythm is driven by steep diagonals and sturdy vertical stems. Figures follow the same compressed, carved look, with bold, closed forms that read best at display sizes.
Well suited to short, high-impact text such as headlines, posters, sports and event graphics, and bold brand marks. It can also work for punchy packaging callouts and attention-grabbing signage where a condensed, forward-leaning voice helps cut through visual noise.
The tone is forceful and kinetic, leaning toward speed, pressure, and impact. Its tight proportions and forward slant create a sense of urgency and motion, while the rounded corners keep it from feeling brittle, adding a slightly retro, engineered confidence.
The letterforms appear designed to maximize impact in limited horizontal space while projecting speed and toughness. Rounded-rectangle construction and blunt terminals suggest an intention to feel engineered and modern, with a display-first focus on strong silhouettes and energetic word shapes.
The design relies on dense black shapes and tight apertures, so spacing and word shapes become dominant; it benefits from generous tracking and plenty of surrounding whitespace. The slant is pronounced enough that long lines can feel like they’re accelerating, which can be used deliberately for emphasis.