Sans Superellipse Woby 1 is a very bold, very wide, medium contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, logos, posters, sports branding, game ui, futuristic, tech, industrial, sporty, gaming, impact, modernize, tech cue, brand distinctiveness, display legibility, rounded, boxy, geometric, extended, soft corners.
A heavy, extended sans with a superelliptical construction: rounds are built from rounded-rectangle bowls and squared-off curves, producing a distinctly boxy softness. Strokes are uniform and dense, with wide counters and small apertures that keep the silhouette compact and powerful. Terminals tend to be flat and horizontal/vertical, and diagonals are simplified into sturdy wedges, giving letters a machined, modular feel. The lowercase follows the same geometry with single-storey forms and consistent corner radii, while the figures echo the same rounded-rectangular logic for a cohesive set.
Best suited to display roles where impact and a technical voice are desired: headlines, titling, posters, esports and sports identities, product marks, and interface labels in games or dashboards. It can work for short blocks of text when set generously, but its dense shapes and stylized details favor larger sizes and concise messaging.
The overall tone is confident and high-impact, reading as contemporary and engineered rather than friendly or calligraphic. Its rounded-square shapes suggest technology interfaces and performance branding, with a slight retro-future flavor that feels at home in sci‑fi and motorsport aesthetics.
The font appears designed to deliver a bold, contemporary presence using a rounded-rectangle geometry that stays consistent across uppercase, lowercase, and numerals. Its goal is likely to combine the authority of a heavy grotesk with a distinctive, tech-forward silhouette that remains highly recognizable in branding and UI contexts.
The design emphasizes strong word-shapes and crisp alignment through squared shoulders and flattened curves, which helps it hold together in tight, bold settings. Some letterforms incorporate distinctive cut-ins and underscored elements (notably in S/s and y), adding a display-oriented character that stands out at larger sizes.