Sans Superellipse Wiru 7 is a regular weight, very wide, monoline, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, logotypes, ui display, posters, packaging, futuristic, tech, sleek, industrial, space-age, tech branding, interface style, futuristic display, systematic geometry, rounded, squared, geometric, modular, streamlined.
A geometric sans with a squared, superellipse construction and consistently rounded corners. Strokes are even and monoline-like, with clean terminals that often resolve into softened rectangular ends. Counters and bowls lean toward rounded rectangles, giving letters like O, D, Q, and 0 a smooth, boxy silhouette. The design favors wide proportions and open spacing, with simplified joins and a tidy, engineered rhythm across caps, lowercase, and numerals.
Best suited to short-to-medium display settings where its wide stance and rounded-square geometry can be appreciated—headlines, branding, product marks, and sci‑fi/tech themed graphics. It can also work for large UI titles, dashboards, and labeling where a clean, engineered look is desired, though the distinctive, boxy curves may feel assertive for long body text.
The overall tone is modern and high-tech, evoking interfaces, sci‑fi labeling, and contemporary industrial design. Its rounded-square geometry reads as efficient and controlled rather than playful, with a cool, forward-looking feel.
The design appears intended to translate rounded-rectangle geometry into a coherent alphabet for contemporary tech and futuristic branding. By keeping stroke weight uniform and corners consistently softened, it aims for a streamlined, system-like voice that stays legible while projecting a modern, engineered personality.
Several forms emphasize horizontals and right-angle logic (notably E/F/T and the stepped, segmented feel of S and 2/3), while diagonals are crisp and minimal (V/W/X/Y/Z). The lowercase maintains the same geometric discipline as the caps, keeping curves tightly controlled and counters fairly rectangular, which reinforces the font’s modular, display-oriented character.