Sans Superellipse Fimup 7 is a very bold, wide, low contrast, italic, tall x-height font.
Keywords: sports branding, esports, headlines, posters, tech ui, futuristic, sporty, techy, confident, energetic, speed, modernity, impact, branding, display, rounded corners, squarish rounds, oblique slant, compact spacing, streamlined.
A heavy oblique sans with a superelliptic construction: bowls and counters lean toward rounded-rectangle geometry with softened corners rather than true circles. Strokes are monolinear and dense, with squared terminals that often finish with subtle rounding, giving the forms a machined yet friendly edge. Proportions favor a large x-height and short extenders, while uppercase letters read broad and stable; curves on characters like O, Q, and S feel squared-off and controlled. The rhythm is tight and forward-leaning, and the numerals match the same blocky, rounded-rectangle logic for a cohesive, display-oriented texture.
Best suited to high-impact applications where a strong, slanted voice is desirable: sports and esports identities, product marks, event posters, automotive or tech campaigns, and punchy headlines. It can also work for UI titling or interface accents where a futuristic, streamlined feel is needed, especially at medium-to-large sizes.
The overall tone is fast and contemporary, evoking motorsport, sci‑fi interfaces, and performance branding. Rounded corners keep it approachable, while the slant and compact, forceful shapes project momentum and assertiveness. It reads as modern and engineered, with a distinctly digital, high-impact voice.
The design appears intended to combine superelliptic, rounded-rectangle construction with an oblique stance to communicate speed and modernity while remaining cleanly sans. Its consistent monoline structure and tightly controlled curves suggest a focus on bold display clarity and a unified, engineered aesthetic across letters and figures.
Distinctive details include a squarish ‘O’/zero-like silhouette, an angular, cut-in style ‘G’, and a ‘Q’ with a pronounced tail that reinforces the forward motion. Lowercase forms maintain the same superelliptic skeleton, producing a consistent texture in mixed-case settings. At smaller sizes the tight internal spaces can feel dense, while at larger sizes the geometry becomes a key stylistic feature.