Sans Superellipse Wury 8 is a very bold, very wide, medium contrast, upright, tall x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, logos, packaging, sports branding, futuristic, industrial, arcade, sporty, techno, high impact, tech branding, modern display, bold signage, geometric styling, rounded corners, squared curves, blocky, geometric, compact counters.
A heavy, wide sans built from rounded-rectangle geometry, with squared curves and consistently softened corners. Strokes are thick and fairly even, producing compact interior counters and a dense, high-impact texture. Curves tend to flatten into straight segments, and joins feel engineered rather than calligraphic, giving letters a modular, superelliptical construction. The lowercase shows a tall x-height and sturdy, simplified forms that hold their shape at large sizes, while figures follow the same blocky, rounded logic with wide set widths and horizontal terminals.
Best suited for display settings where impact matters: headlines, posters, branding marks, and product or entertainment packaging. It also fits UI titles, esports or athletic identities, and tech/event graphics where a bold, futuristic voice is desired. For long passages or small sizes, the dense counters suggest using generous size and spacing for readability.
The overall tone is assertive and contemporary, leaning toward sci‑fi, gaming, and machine-made aesthetics. Its chunky rounded forms feel confident and energetic, with a playful edge that recalls arcade and sports branding while still reading as technical and purposeful.
The design appears intended to merge a geometric, rounded-rectangle construction with maximum visual weight and width, creating a distinctive, modern display voice. It prioritizes presence and a techno-industrial personality over delicate detail, aiming for strong silhouettes that reproduce cleanly across digital and print applications.
Spacing and proportions emphasize width and stability, creating a strong horizontal rhythm. Many shapes favor closed, compact counters and shortened apertures, which amplifies solidity but can reduce clarity in smaller text. The punctuation shown (e.g., apostrophe, ampersand) follows the same simplified, block-forward styling and remains visually weight-matched to the letters.