Sans Superellipse Irve 7 is a very bold, very wide, medium contrast, upright, tall x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, branding, sports, packaging, industrial, sporty, retro, assertive, techy, maximum impact, geometric branding, rugged legibility, modular consistency, blocky, squared, rounded corners, compact apertures, ink-trap hints.
A heavy, squared sans with rounded corners and a pronounced rounded-rectangle (superellipse) construction throughout. Strokes are thick and steady with minimal modulation, and counters are tight, often appearing as small rectangular or rounded-rect cutouts. The proportions are broad and compact, with short, sturdy joins and mostly blunt terminals; diagonals (as in V, W, X, Y) stay chunky and stable. Several glyphs show notched or stepped interior cuts and corner relief that reads like subtle ink-trap-inspired shaping, helping the dense forms stay legible at display sizes. Overall spacing and rhythm feel tight and emphatic, producing a strong, poster-like texture in text.
Best suited for display settings where impact matters: headlines, posters, punchy branding marks, sports and esports graphics, packaging callouts, and bold signage. It will also work for short UI or label text when set large, but the compact apertures and dense color make it more comfortable in brief runs than in long reading.
The tone is confident and forceful, with a utilitarian, engineered character that suggests sports branding, industrial labeling, and bold retro display typography. Its rounded-square geometry keeps the feel friendly enough to avoid harshness, while the dense weight and tight apertures project power and impact.
The design appears intended to deliver maximum visual punch using a consistent rounded-rectangle geometry, balancing a tough, industrial build with softened corners for approachability. The notched internal shaping suggests an effort to preserve clarity and distinctive silhouettes despite very heavy strokes.
The design leans on squared curves rather than true circles, so round letters like O/C/G read as rounded boxes; this creates a consistent, modular texture across lines. Numerals follow the same blocky logic, with compact counters and sturdy silhouettes that suit large-scale use.