Sans Superellipse Wave 8 is a very bold, very wide, low contrast, upright, tall x-height font visually similar to 'Aspire' by Grype and '946 Latin' by Roman Type (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: headlines, posters, branding, gaming, packaging, futuristic, techno, industrial, sporty, sci-fi, impact, modernity, tech feel, geometric unity, brand presence, rounded corners, squared curves, modular, soft-rectilinear, compact counters.
A heavy, squared-off sans built from rounded-rectangle forms. Corners are consistently softened, producing superelliptic bowls and rectangular counters, while diagonals are minimal and tend to feel clipped rather than calligraphic. Proportions lean wide with sturdy stems and blunt terminals, and the overall rhythm is blocky and architectural. Letterforms like O/Q and the numerals emphasize rounded-square silhouettes, and the design maintains a uniform, monoline feel with dense, closed interiors.
Best suited to display settings where its mass and geometric character can read clearly: headlines, logotypes, product branding, and bold packaging. It also fits UI or motion-graphics moments that want a tech or gaming flavor, particularly for titles, badges, and callouts rather than extended body text.
The tone reads modern and engineered—confident, tough, and slightly retro-futurist. Its rounded corners keep the weight from feeling harsh, but the geometry still signals machinery, hardware, and tech interfaces. Overall it conveys speed, strength, and a controlled, digital-era aesthetic.
The design appears intended to deliver a strong, contemporary geometric voice based on rounded-rectangular construction. By combining blunt, modular shapes with softened corners, it aims for an assertive display style that feels technical and modern while remaining visually smooth.
Curves are handled as softened rectangles rather than circles, giving the face a distinctive “capsule” feel. Apertures are generally tight and counters are compact, so the texture becomes very dark and solid in paragraphs, especially at smaller sizes. The digit set matches the same rounded-square logic, reinforcing a unified display voice across letters and numbers.