Sans Superellipse Wilo 2 is a regular weight, very wide, monoline, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, logos, posters, ui display, product branding, futuristic, tech, sci‑fi, sleek, modular, sci‑fi styling, tech branding, interface tone, modern display, rounded corners, geometric, superelliptic, extended, streamlined.
A geometric sans with a rounded-rectangle (superellipse) construction and consistent monoline strokes. Corners are generously radiused, terminals are clean and horizontal/vertical, and curves are squarish rather than circular, producing a compact, engineered feel in bowls and counters. Proportions are notably extended, with wide capitals and lowercase forms that keep a stable baseline and even rhythm; diagonals (as in K, M, N, V, W, X, Y) are crisp and angular against the softened corners. Numerals follow the same rounded-rect logic, with a distinct slashed zero and largely rectilinear, tech-like silhouettes.
Best suited to headlines, branding, and short UI/display strings where its extended geometry and rounded-rect forms can read as intentional and premium. It works especially well for technology, gaming, transportation, and futuristic editorial styling, and can add a sleek, modern voice to packaging or event graphics.
The overall tone reads contemporary and futuristic, evoking digital interfaces, aerospace/automotive branding, and sci‑fi titling. Its rounded geometry keeps it friendly enough for consumer tech, while the extended stance and squared curves maintain a precise, machine-made character.
The font appears designed to translate a superelliptic, rounded-rect motif into a cohesive alphabet for modern digital and brand environments, balancing precision with softened corners for approachability. Its extended proportions and consistent stroke system suggest an emphasis on strong silhouette recognition and a polished, interface-ready look.
The design’s wide set and open internal spaces help preserve clarity at display sizes, and the uniform stroke weight gives a clean, schematic texture in lines of text. Several glyphs lean into distinctive, stylized constructions (notably the angular joins in V/W/Y and the segmented feel of some curves), reinforcing a purposeful, designed-for-tech aesthetic.