Sans Superellipse Unry 7 is a very bold, very wide, monoline, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, logotypes, branding, posters, packaging, futuristic, tech, sporty, arcade, industrial, display impact, tech aesthetic, geometric consistency, brand emphasis, rounded corners, square curves, geometric, compact counters, stencil-like.
A heavy geometric sans built from rounded-rectangle forms and smooth superellipse curves, with consistent stroke thickness and softened corners throughout. Bowls and counters are compact and squared-off, producing a tight internal rhythm, while terminals often finish with horizontal cuts or subtle step-like joins. The uppercase set feels engineered and stable, with broad proportions and low contrast; lowercase echoes the same modular construction, including single-storey forms and simplified joins that keep the texture uniform. Numerals follow the same squared-rounded logic, with enclosed shapes reading as rounded boxes and open forms reduced to clean, horizontal-led structures.
Best suited to display settings where its chunky geometry and soft-square construction can be read at size—headlines, logos, product marks, posters, and punchy packaging. It also works well for tech and entertainment graphics (apps, gaming, esports, sci-fi themed layouts) where a modern, interface-inspired voice is desired.
The overall tone is futuristic and technical, with a streamlined, machine-made feel that recalls sci-fi interfaces, motorsport branding, and arcade-era display typography. Its rounded corners keep the attitude friendly rather than aggressive, but the dense counters and blocky silhouettes maintain a confident, high-impact presence.
The design appears intended to deliver a bold, modern display voice using a consistent rounded-rectangle geometry, prioritizing impact and stylistic unity over conventional text readability. Its simplified joins and squared counters suggest an aim for a contemporary, engineered look that feels at home in digital and industrial branding contexts.
Horizontal strokes and interior notches become a recurring motif, creating a slightly segmented, UI-like detailing in letters such as E, F, S and several numerals. The combination of rounded outer corners with boxy interiors gives the design a distinctive ‘soft-square’ signature that stays consistent across cases.