Sans Superellipse Ifdu 7 is a very bold, wide, low contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: posters, headlines, logos, branding, gaming ui, techy, futuristic, industrial, playful, impact, modernity, interface feel, distinctiveness, rounded corners, squarish bowls, stencil-like cuts, geometric, compact apertures.
This typeface is built from chunky, geometric shapes with rounded-rectangle (superellipse-like) curves and consistently softened corners. Strokes are thick and uniform, with squared terminals and tight, rectangular counters that give letters a carved, modular feel. Many forms show small notches or cut-ins at joins and corners (notably in characters like S, G, and some numerals), reinforcing a constructed, engineered rhythm. Uppercase and lowercase share a sturdy, compact structure; ascenders and descenders are short and the overall spacing reads slightly tight, emphasizing dense, blocky word shapes.
It performs best in display settings where its heavy, constructed shapes can read clearly: posters, splashy headlines, product marks, and short branding phrases. The geometric, interface-like flavor also suits gaming and tech UI titles, packaging callouts, and modern signage where a bold, friendly-industrial voice is desired.
The overall tone feels synthetic and machine-made, like signage for sci‑fi interfaces or industrial labeling. Rounded edges keep it approachable, while the sharp internal cutouts add a purposeful, technical edge. The result is bold and attention-grabbing with a playful, arcade-like confidence.
The design appears intended to fuse rounded, friendly geometry with a fabricated, modular aesthetic. By combining soft outer corners with tight counters and occasional cut-in notches, it aims to create a distinctive, high-impact sans suitable for contemporary tech and entertainment contexts.
Distinctive details include rectangular counters in rounded letters (O, D, P, 0, 8), a single-storey “a” with a flat, horizontal entry, and a “g” with a strong lower bowl and squared interior. Numerals echo the same rounded-rectangle construction, with especially boxy “0” and “8,” and a stepped, digital-like “2” and “3.”