Sans Superellipse Wipa 6 is a regular weight, very wide, monoline, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, branding, posters, ui display, tech packaging, futuristic, technical, retro tech, clean, geometric, tech aesthetic, interface voice, modular system, sci-fi display, rounded corners, squared curves, modular, open counters, extended.
This typeface is built from rounded-rectangle geometry with softly squared curves and consistent, monoline strokes. Forms are horizontally extended with generous internal space, creating wide counters in letters like O, D, and P. Terminals are clean and mostly squared-off with rounded corners; joins are crisp, and diagonals (as in N, V, W, X, Y) are simplified and mechanical rather than calligraphic. Uppercase and lowercase share the same geometric logic, with single-storey constructions and a compact, engineered rhythm that stays coherent across letters and numerals.
Well suited for headlines, logos, title treatments, and product branding where a sleek technical voice is desired. It also fits UI display text, game/interface graphics, and packaging or labeling that benefits from a clean, engineered aesthetic. For longer passages, it works best with ample size and spacing to maintain clarity.
The overall tone is futuristic and device-like, evoking sci‑fi interfaces, industrial labeling, and late‑20th‑century tech aesthetics. Its wide stance and rounded-square language feel orderly, controlled, and modern, with a slightly retro arcade/space-station flavor.
The design appears intended to translate superelliptical, rounded-rect geometry into a cohesive alphabet that reads as contemporary and machine-made. Its wide proportions and uniform stroke treatment prioritize a stable, modular look that aligns with technology and interface-driven themes.
Readability is strongest at display sizes where the wide proportions and open counters can breathe; in dense text, the extended width and similar structural motifs across glyphs can create a uniform texture. Numerals follow the same rounded-rectilinear logic, giving figures a consistent, systemized appearance alongside caps and lowercase.