Sans Superellipse Wigy 7 is a bold, very wide, monoline, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, logotypes, branding, posters, packaging, futuristic, techy, sporty, industrial, confident, tech branding, display impact, futuristic tone, sport styling, geometric clarity, rounded, geometric, squarish, extended, streamlined.
A geometric sans with rounded-rectangle construction and smooth superellipse curves. Strokes are even and heavy, with generous rounding on corners and terminals that produces a soft, machined look. Counters tend toward squared ovals, and many letters use horizontal “slot” apertures or inset notches, giving the forms a layered, engineered feel. The proportions are expanded with broad bowls and wide capitals, while diagonals in letters like V, W, X, and Y stay crisp and strongly directional. Numerals follow the same rounded, cut-in motif, especially in 2, 3, 5, and 8, reinforcing a cohesive, display-forward rhythm.
Best suited for headlines, logos, and brand marks where its widened geometry and rounded-rect counters can read clearly. It also fits tech products, sports identities, vehicle or hardware branding, UI hero text, and striking packaging titles. For dense body copy, its strong internal cut-ins and display texture are more likely to feel busy than neutral.
The overall tone reads modern and technical, with a sporty, sci‑fi edge. Rounded corners keep it approachable, while the widened stance and engineered apertures convey speed, control, and precision. It feels designed to look confident and “designed,” even at large sizes where the details become part of the personality.
The design appears intended to merge a friendly rounded geometry with a high-tech, performance-oriented aesthetic. Its consistent superellipse construction and engineered apertures suggest a focus on distinctive branding and impact, prioritizing silhouette and texture over invisibility.
In longer lines the distinctive cut-in horizontals and tight apertures become a key identifying feature, creating a strong texture that’s best appreciated at headline and short-text sizes. The lowercase maintains the same constructed logic as the uppercase, with single-storey forms and compact joins that emphasize a clean, synthetic voice.