Sans Superellipse Efnif 7 is a regular weight, normal width, low contrast, italic, normal x-height font.
Keywords: sports branding, tech branding, ui display, headlines, product titling, techy, sporty, futuristic, sleek, dynamic, modernization, speed cue, technical tone, geometric cohesion, systematic styling, rounded corners, obround forms, chamfered feel, slanted terminals, mechanical.
This typeface is a slanted sans with a clean, monoline construction and rounded-rectangle (superellipse) geometry throughout. Curves tend to resolve into softly squared bowls and counters, and many joins and terminals are subtly angled, reinforcing a forward-leaning, engineered rhythm. Proportions are compact and efficient, with open apertures and consistent stroke weight that stays steady across straight and curved segments. Figures echo the same obround logic, producing a cohesive, modular texture in both all-caps and mixed-case settings.
It works best for branding, headlines, and short to medium-length display text where a fast, technical tone is desired—such as sports identities, automotive or gaming graphics, product names, and interface-forward marketing. The clear, geometric figures also suit dashboards, labels, and feature callouts where numeric consistency matters.
The overall tone is modern and performance-oriented, with a distinctly technical, streamlined voice. Its rounded-squared forms suggest product design and interface aesthetics, while the slant adds speed and momentum that reads as sporty and future-facing.
The design appears intended to blend a contemporary sans structure with superellipse shaping to create a controlled, aerodynamic look. By pairing monoline strokes with rounded-rectangular curves and a strong slant, it aims for a modern, engineered voice that signals speed, precision, and digital-product sensibilities.
The design’s character comes from the tension between straight strokes and softened corners: roundness is controlled rather than playful, and counters often feel squared-off rather than circular. The italic angle is pronounced enough to create motion in headlines while remaining orderly and consistent across the set.