Sans Superellipse Wafu 6 is a very bold, very wide, low contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, logos, posters, packaging, sports branding, futuristic, techy, industrial, confident, sporty, impact, modernity, tech feel, brand presence, signage clarity, square-rounded, extended, geometric, modular, streamlined.
A heavy, extended sans with squared-off curves and rounded-rectangle (superellipse-like) counters. Strokes are monolinear and blunt-ended, with generous horizontal emphasis and compact apertures that keep forms tight and punchy. Curves on letters like C, G, O, and S resolve into flattened shoulders rather than fully circular arcs, creating a modular, engineered rhythm. The lowercase echoes the same geometry, with a single-storey a, compact bowls, and a sturdy, utilitarian presence; numerals follow suit with broad, simplified silhouettes and horizontally oriented interior openings where applicable.
Best suited to display sizes where its broad proportions and blocky curves can read cleanly—headlines, wordmarks, product branding, posters, and high-impact packaging. It can work for short UI labels or navigation in larger sizes, especially in tech or automotive contexts, but its tight apertures and strong mass are more effective in brief, bold statements than long-form reading.
The overall tone feels futuristic and machine-made, with a sporty, industrial confidence. Its wide stance and squared rounding suggest technology, transportation, and performance branding rather than warmth or tradition.
Likely designed to deliver maximum visual impact with a contemporary, engineered geometry—combining rounded-rectangle construction, wide proportions, and simplified interior spaces to create a distinctive techno-display voice that remains clean and highly reproducible across branding applications.
The design leans on consistent corner radii and rounded-rectangular counters, producing a clean, synthetic texture in paragraphs. Several glyphs show deliberate horizontal cut-ins/slots (notably in E/S-like constructions and some numerals), reinforcing a techno signage aesthetic and adding motion-like accents without increasing contrast.