Sans Superellipse Wubo 14 is a very bold, very wide, medium contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, logos, packaging, sports branding, sporty, techy, retro, assertive, playful, impact, modernity, distinctiveness, branding, rounded corners, square counters, ink-trap cuts, blocky, compact apertures.
A heavy, wide display sans with a squarish, superelliptical skeleton and generously rounded outer corners. Strokes are largely uniform, with crisp, straight-sided verticals and horizontals and subtly softened joins that keep the forms from feeling purely mechanical. Many letters use squared counters and small apertures, and several glyphs show deliberate triangular notches or cut-ins at joints and terminals, adding a chiseled, ink-trap-like texture. The overall rhythm is dense and stable, with broad proportions and a sturdy baseline presence that reads best at larger sizes.
This font suits headline-driven work where impact matters: posters, bold editorial headers, athletic or esports-style branding, and graphic packaging. It also performs well for short UI labels, badges, and title cards where the squared, rounded forms can reinforce a tech-forward or industrial theme, especially when set with generous tracking.
The tone is confident and high-impact, mixing a futuristic, industrial feel with a slightly retro arcade/sports-header energy. The rounded-rectangle construction keeps it friendly, while the sharp cut-ins and tight openings add tension and speed, giving the font a punchy, competitive attitude.
The design appears intended to deliver a compact, high-energy display voice built from rounded-rectangle geometry. The added cut-ins and notched terminals suggest a goal of improving separation at joins while giving the letterforms a distinctive, engineered character for branding and titling.
Curves are typically expressed as rounded rectangles rather than circular bowls, producing a consistent, modular look across letters and numerals. The sample text shows strong word-shape blocks and tight interior spaces, which can reduce clarity in small sizes but enhances the bold, graphic silhouette in headlines.