Sans Superellipse Jigud 2 is a very bold, wide, low contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, branding, sportswear, packaging, sporty, industrial, techy, assertive, retro, impact, utility, modernity, athletics, blocky, squared, rounded corners, compact apertures, stencil-like cuts.
A heavy, block-built sans with rounded-rectangle (superellipse) construction and softened corners throughout. Counters are mostly rectangular and tight, producing compact apertures and a dense, poster-like color on the page. Many joins are crisp and mechanical, with occasional angled notches and cut-ins that give the forms a subtly engineered, almost stencil-adjacent feel. Numerals follow the same squared, rounded-corner logic, with the 0 rendered as a rounded rectangle and other figures built from strong horizontal and vertical masses.
Best suited to display settings where solidity and immediacy matter: headlines, posters, large-format signage, and bold brand wordmarks. It also fits sporty and industrial packaging, product labeling, and UI title treatments where compact, squared forms read as sturdy and modern. For longer passages, it works most comfortably at larger sizes with generous spacing.
The overall tone is forceful and utilitarian, reading as confident and workmanlike rather than refined. Its geometry and squared counters evoke a tech/industrial sensibility, while the chunky, rounded corners add a friendly retro-sport flavor. The result feels energetic and attention-grabbing, suited to bold statements and high-impact messaging.
The font appears designed to deliver maximum impact through compact, rounded-rect geometry and strong, simplified letterforms. Its repeating corner radii and squared counters suggest an intention to feel engineered and contemporary while staying approachable through softened edges.
The design relies on consistent rectangular counter shapes and repeated corner radii, creating a cohesive rhythm across caps, lowercase, and figures. The lowercase maintains substantial mass and simplified details, prioritizing punch and uniformity over delicacy; this keeps texture consistent in headlines but can feel dense in extended text.