Sans Superellipse Soraz 7 is a very bold, normal width, medium contrast, upright, tall x-height font visually similar to 'American Diner' by Jonathan Macagba, 'Novaro' by Marvadesign, and 'FTY Konkrete' by The Fontry (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: headlines, posters, branding, signage, packaging, industrial, sporty, retro, assertive, compact, impact, modernize, bold branding, geometric uniformity, rounded corners, soft terminals, monoline, condensed feel, geometric.
A heavy, monoline sans built from rounded-rectangle and superellipse geometry, with squared-off curves and consistently softened corners. Counters are tight and apertures are relatively closed, creating dense, blocky silhouettes that read as sturdy and compact. Curved letters like C, G, O, and S look more like rounded boxes than circles, while vertical strokes stay straight and even, giving a stable rhythm. The overall texture is dark and uniform, with minimal modulation and a strong emphasis on verticality.
Best suited to large sizes where its dense shapes and tight counters can deliver maximum impact—headlines, poster typography, logos/wordmarks, packaging fronts, and wayfinding. It can work in short blocks of copy for display, but its dark texture and closed forms suggest avoiding long passages at small sizes.
The tone is bold and utilitarian with a sporty, retro-industrial edge. Its rounded-square forms feel mechanical yet friendly, projecting confidence and impact rather than delicacy. The font reads like it was designed for signage and bold statements where presence matters.
The design appears intended to translate geometric, rounded-rectangle construction into a strong display voice that remains clean and modern. By keeping strokes uniform and corners consistently softened, it aims for high-impact legibility with a distinctive squared-round personality.
Many glyphs show a distinctive “pill” logic: straight sides with broad, rounded ends, and compact internal spaces. Numerals follow the same squared-round construction, helping mixed alphanumeric settings maintain a consistent, poster-like color on the page.