Sans Superellipse Wiry 5 is a bold, very wide, monoline, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, logo, branding, poster, packaging, futuristic, tech, sci-fi, industrial, sporty, modernize, systematize, signal tech, stand out, brand voice, rounded corners, squared curves, geometric, extended, modular.
A geometric sans with superelliptical construction: curves resolve into rounded-rectangle bowls and counters, and corners are consistently radiused. Strokes are uniform and sturdy, producing a clean, monoline texture with a wide, extended footprint and generous horizontal spacing. Forms are simplified and slightly modular—C/G/S and the rounded letters read as soft-cornered boxes, while diagonals in K/V/W/X/Y are straight and crisp. The lowercase follows the same logic with single-storey a and g, compact counters, and a flat-topped, squared-shoulder rhythm; numerals are similarly boxy with softened corners and open, easily distinguishable shapes.
Best suited to large sizes where its wide stance and rounded-rect geometry can read clearly—headlines, logos, product branding, and poster or packaging work. It also fits UI or on-screen graphics when a tech-forward display voice is desired, while extended text may feel heavy due to its broad proportions and dense stroke presence.
The overall tone feels futuristic and engineered, like display type drawn for interfaces, hardware markings, or sci‑fi branding. Its rounded-square geometry softens the hardness of the construction, keeping the voice approachable while still reading as technical and performance-oriented.
The design appears intended to deliver a contemporary, machine-made aesthetic built from softened rectangles—balancing strict geometry with friendly rounding. It aims for instant recognizability and a cohesive system look across capitals, lowercase, and numerals for modern display typography.
A few signature details add character: the Q uses a small diagonal tail, the e features a prominent horizontal bar inside a rounded counter, and many terminals finish with straight cuts rather than flared ends. The design maintains a consistent corner radius across letters and digits, which reinforces a cohesive, product-like visual system.