Sans Superellipse Wany 6 is a very bold, very wide, monoline, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, branding, gaming, sports graphics, futuristic, techy, assertive, sporty, industrial, impact, modernity, tech flavor, display clarity, squared, rounded corners, blocky, geometric, compact counters.
A heavy, geometric sans with rounded-rectangle construction and consistently thick strokes. Curves are minimized and most forms resolve into squared bowls with softened corners, producing compact, rectangular counters in letters like O, D, P, and a. Terminals tend to be flat and horizontal, with occasional angular joins in diagonals (A, K, V, W, X) for a crisp, engineered feel. Numerals follow the same boxy logic, mixing straight runs with rounded corners and tight interior openings for strong, uniform color in text.
Best suited to short, high-impact settings where silhouette matters: headlines, posters, product marks, and branding systems with a technical or athletic edge. It also fits interfaces and gaming/Esports graphics where squared, device-like letterforms complement a digital environment. For longer text, it works most comfortably at larger sizes where the compact counters stay clear.
The overall tone is modern and functional, leaning toward a sci‑fi and machinery aesthetic. Its broad stance and squared curves project confidence and impact, making the voice feel bold, technical, and performance-oriented rather than warm or literary.
The font appears designed to deliver a strong, contemporary voice built from rounded-square geometry, prioritizing immediacy and recognizability. Its forms suggest an intent to evoke technology, hardware, and modern motion graphics while maintaining consistent stroke weight and a clean, constructed rhythm.
The design’s tight counters and strong horizontal emphasis create dense texture at paragraph sizes, while the distinctive rounded-square geometry remains recognizable in headlines. Several glyphs show purposeful stencil-like separations and cut-ins (notably in S and some numerals), reinforcing the engineered, display-driven character.