Sans Superellipse Eskoz 8 is a bold, wide, low contrast, italic, normal x-height font visually similar to 'Kabyta' by Agny Hasya Studio, 'Gemsbuck Pro' by Studio Fat Cat, and 'Hemi Head' by Typodermic (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: sports branding, tech ui, headlines, posters, product branding, futuristic, technical, sporty, sleek, confident, speed cue, modernization, tech aesthetic, brand impact, geometric unity, oblique, squared-round, geometric, streamlined, tight apertures.
A slanted sans with a geometric, squared-round construction: bowls and counters are built from rounded rectangles with softened corners, producing a superelliptical rhythm across letters and numerals. Strokes are consistently heavy and even, with compact apertures and clipped terminals that emphasize forward motion. Uppercase forms feel broad and stable, while lowercase keeps a relatively straightforward, single-storey structure where applicable, maintaining a cohesive, engineered silhouette. Numerals echo the same rounded-rectangle logic, staying sturdy and highly uniform in stroke behavior.
Best suited to display-forward typography such as headlines, product marks, esports and athletics graphics, and technology branding where a streamlined, modern voice is desired. It can also work for short UI labels or interface accents when clarity is supported by adequate size and spacing.
The overall tone is modern and performance-oriented, reading as fast, engineered, and slightly aggressive without becoming flashy. Its oblique stance and squared-round geometry evoke contemporary tech interfaces, automotive and sports branding, and other contexts where speed and precision are part of the message.
The design intent appears focused on delivering a forward-leaning, contemporary sans that feels engineered and aerodynamic, using superelliptical geometry to unify letters and numbers into a distinctive, modern system.
Spacing appears intentionally open enough to keep the dense letterforms from clogging, while the slant and squared counters create a strong diagonal texture in lines of text. The design’s distinctive rounded-rectangle counters make it recognizable at display sizes, but the tight apertures suggest extra care may be needed in small sizes or low-resolution settings.