Sans Superellipse Wozi 5 is a light, very wide, very high contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: logotypes, headlines, posters, tech branding, ui titles, futuristic, tech, sleek, precision, futurism, sci‑fi branding, geometric style, display impact, rounded, geometric, monolinear, streamlined, aerodynamic.
A geometric sans built from rounded-rectangle (superellipse) skeletons, with long horizontal spans, softened corners, and generous internal counters. Many forms split into layered strokes—thick, ribbon-like horizontals paired with hairline verticals—creating a distinctly engineered contrast and a modular, banded rhythm across the alphabet. Curves are smooth and controlled, terminals are clean and often flattened, and diagonal joins tend to sharpen into tapered points, especially in letters like K, V, W, X, and Y. Overall spacing reads open and measured, with a strong emphasis on horizontal continuity and a consistent, mechanical contour logic.
Best suited for display work where its unusual contrast and rounded-rect geometry can be appreciated: logotypes, wordmarks, product names, posters, sci‑fi or tech-themed branding, and short UI headings. It is particularly effective when set with ample tracking and at medium-to-large sizes, where the layered strokes and tapered joins remain clear.
The design conveys a polished sci‑fi and interface-like tone—cool, synthetic, and forward-looking. Its banded strokes and rounded geometry feel like industrial design details, suggesting speed, precision, and modern technology rather than warmth or tradition.
This font appears designed to merge superelliptical geometry with a high-tech, aerodynamic aesthetic, using banded horizontals and hairline structural elements to create a distinctive, futuristic texture. The intention seems to prioritize character and visual identity in short strings, delivering a sleek, engineered voice for modern, technology-adjacent communication.
The most distinctive signature is the repeated “double-bar” construction in many glyphs (notably B, E, G, S, 8), which creates a scanline/track effect and gives text a dynamic, motion-like texture. Several letters rely on very thin verticals and pointed diagonals, adding delicacy that can become visually prominent in dense settings.