Sans Superellipse Yomi 7 is a very bold, very wide, very high contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, branding, sports, packaging, industrial, assertive, compact, retro, mechanical, impact, solidity, geometry, display, blocky, rounded corners, squared curves, stencil-like counters, tight apertures.
A heavy, block-driven sans with rounded-rectangle construction throughout. Curves resolve into squarish bowls and superelliptical corners, producing a compact, engineered feel rather than a purely circular rhythm. Terminals are generally flat and abrupt, with minimal modulation; counters tend to be tight and often read as small rectangular cut-ins (notably in forms like B, D, O, P, and e). Uppercase proportions are broad and sturdy, while lowercase maintains a similarly chunky texture with short ascenders/descenders and simplified joins that keep the overall silhouette dense and uniform.
Best suited for short, high-impact settings such as headlines, posters, logotypes, badges, and packaging where a dense, confident voice is desirable. It can also work for sports or industrial-themed branding and signage-style compositions, especially when set with generous spacing or at larger sizes to preserve internal clarity.
The overall tone is bold and no-nonsense, with an industrial, poster-like confidence. Its squared curves and tight apertures give it a utilitarian, machine-made character that can feel retro in a mid-century display sense, while still reading contemporary in high-impact layouts.
The font appears designed to deliver maximum visual punch using a rounded-rectangle geometry, prioritizing bold silhouettes and a consistent, constructed rhythm. Its simplified apertures and compact counters suggest an intention toward strong display performance and a recognizable, industrial-leaning personality.
The design’s consistency comes from repeating rounded-corner rectangles in bowls, shoulders, and inner cutouts, creating a strong pattern across text. In paragraph samples the dense interior spaces and compact letterforms amplify darkness and presence, favoring headline impact over airy readability at smaller sizes.