Sans Superellipse Wiwu 2 is a bold, very wide, low contrast, italic, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, sports branding, tech branding, posters, gaming ui, futuristic, sporty, technical, sleek, aggressive, speed motif, tech styling, display impact, modern branding, digital feel, rounded corners, superelliptic, chamfered, extended, oblique.
A slanted, extended sans with superelliptic construction: counters and outer curves resolve into rounded-rectangle forms with softened corners rather than true circles. Strokes are monolinear with broad, flat terminals and frequent horizontal cuts, giving many letters a streamlined, segmented feel. The caps are wide and stable, with compact apertures and squared-off bowls (notably in O/D/P/Q), while diagonals in A/V/W/X/Y are crisp and forward-leaning. Lowercase mirrors the same geometry, mixing rounded-rect counters with angular joins; the overall texture is dense and mechanical, and the numerals follow the same squared, aerodynamic logic with open, horizontal slicing in several figures.
Best suited to short, high-impact settings such as headlines, posters, esports or automotive graphics, tech product branding, and interface titling where a fast, engineered tone is desired. It also works for logo wordmarks and signage that benefit from wide proportions and a streamlined, digital look, while longer text should be set generously due to the compact apertures and stylized cuts.
The font projects speed and engineered precision, with a distinctly futuristic and motorsport-like voice. Its oblique stance and squared, modular curves feel digital and performance-oriented, suggesting motion, machinery, and contemporary tech aesthetics rather than warmth or tradition.
The design appears intended to blend geometric superellipse forms with a high-speed, techno sensibility, using an oblique stance and segmented terminals to evoke aerodynamics and digital instrumentation. Its consistent rounded-rectangle language suggests a goal of modernity and brand-forward distinctiveness over neutral text readability.
Several glyphs use deliberate breaks or inset bars (especially in E/F/S and some numerals), which adds a techno display character but can reduce clarity at smaller sizes. The overall rhythm stays consistent across caps, lowercase, and figures, with a strong emphasis on horizontal flow and rounded-corner rectangles.