Sans Superellipse Umwe 7 is a bold, wide, monoline, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, logos, branding, packaging, tech, futuristic, industrial, game ui, retro sci-fi, display impact, tech aesthetic, geometric branding, ui titling, rounded corners, squared curves, soft geometric, compact apertures, high stroke contrast (in.
A geometric sans built from rounded-rectangle and superellipse-like forms, with soft corners and consistently thick strokes. Curves feel squared-off rather than circular, producing boxy counters in letters like O, o, and 0, while straight stems end in clean, slightly softened terminals. The design maintains a steady rhythm with compact apertures and sturdy horizontal bars, giving the lowercase a single-storey structure and a distinctly engineered feel across both cases and numerals.
Best suited to large-size settings where its rounded-rect geometry and tight apertures can read as intentional design features—such as headlines, posters, identity marks, product branding, and packaging. It can also work well for UI-style titles, esports or game-themed graphics, and short blocks of display text where a strong, technical personality is desired.
The overall tone reads contemporary and technical, with a retro-futurist edge reminiscent of interface lettering and sci‑fi titling. Its squared curves and dense, confident shapes convey strength and precision more than warmth or calligraphy.
The font appears designed to deliver a robust, modern display voice using a superellipse construction: squarish curves, softened corners, and uniform stroke weight. The intention seems to balance machinic precision with approachable rounding, creating a tech-forward look that remains clean and highly graphic.
The uppercase forms are especially architectural, with wide, rounded-rectangular bowls (B, D, P, R) and a clean, simplified S and G. Numerals follow the same superelliptical logic, with a squared 0 and segmented, horizontal emphasis in 2 and 3, reinforcing an electronic-display sensibility without becoming fully stencil or pixel-based.