Sans Superellipse Enmes 7 is a regular weight, normal width, low contrast, italic, normal x-height font.
Keywords: sports branding, tech branding, ui display, headlines, gaming, futuristic, technical, sporty, sleek, dynamic, speed cue, tech tone, modern geometry, systematic consistency, brand impact, rounded corners, square-round, extended slant, mono-stroke, angular.
A slanted, monoline sans with a superelliptical construction: curves resolve into rounded-rectangle corners, and bowls tend toward squarish ovals rather than true circles. Strokes maintain an even thickness with clean, mechanically consistent joins, while terminals often finish with softened corners that keep the overall texture smooth. Proportions feel slightly wide in the round letters, with open apertures and compact counters that preserve clarity as forms shear forward. Numerals and uppercase share the same squared-round logic, producing a uniform, engineered rhythm across the set.
Well suited to headlines, branding, and short-to-medium display text where a fast, technical voice is desired. It can work effectively in product interfaces, dashboards, and motion graphics where geometric clarity and forward momentum help reinforce a modern, engineered aesthetic. It’s particularly at home in sports, automotive, and gaming contexts that benefit from a sleek, performance-driven look.
The overall tone is modern and performance-oriented, blending a technical, engineered feel with a fast, forward-leaning energy. Its rounded corners soften the otherwise geometric construction, giving it a sleek, approachable futurism rather than a harsh industrial edge.
Likely designed to deliver a contemporary geometric italic with an engineered, superelliptical skeleton—combining speed cues from the slant with softened, rounded-rectangle forms for a clean, modern signature. The consistent stroke behavior and squared-round shapes suggest an intention to feel technical and systematic while remaining visually smooth and friendly.
The italic angle is pronounced and consistent, creating strong directional flow in words and a lively horizontal rhythm. Several shapes emphasize a squared ‘0/O’ vocabulary and rounded-rect counters, which reads as contemporary UI/transportation design language. The compact, controlled forms suggest careful spacing and a focus on clean silhouette recognition.