Sans Superellipse Yoje 7 is a very bold, very wide, high contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: posters, headlines, logos, gaming, packaging, industrial, futuristic, techno, assertive, playful, impact, distinctiveness, tech aesthetic, display clarity, blocky, rounded corners, chamfered feel, inset cuts, soft squares.
A heavy, block-based sans with wide proportions and compact counters built from rounded-rectangle geometry. Strokes are largely monolinear in mass but visually sharpened by frequent inset cuts, notches, and split terminals that create thin internal highlights and crisp rhythm. Corners are consistently softened, producing a superelliptic, squared-off silhouette, while spacing feels generous enough to keep the dense shapes readable in display settings. Uppercase and lowercase share a sturdy, engineered construction, with single-storey forms and simplified bowls that emphasize flat horizontals and verticals.
Best suited to impactful headlines, posters, titles, and branding where the chunky silhouettes and technical notches can be appreciated. It also fits gaming and entertainment graphics, product packaging, and bold interface or signage moments where a futuristic, industrial voice is desired.
The overall tone is bold and mechanical, evoking sci‑fi interfaces, arcade signage, and industrial labeling. The notched details add energy and a slightly playful, gamified edge, making the face feel both tough and stylized rather than purely utilitarian.
The font appears designed to deliver maximum visual punch through broad, rounded-rectangular forms, then differentiate itself with systematic inset cuts that suggest engineered parts or digital segments. The goal seems to be a display face that feels modern and industrial while remaining cohesive and highly recognizable.
The design relies on distinctive internal cutouts and segmented strokes (notably in letters like E, S, and several numerals), which become a defining texture at larger sizes. Because counters are tight and the silhouettes are very dark, the font reads best when given room—either at display sizes or with extra tracking and line spacing.