Sans Superellipse Wojy 11 is a very bold, very wide, medium contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, logos, gaming, packaging, futuristic, techno, space-age, industrial, arcade, display impact, tech aesthetic, sci-fi branding, modular styling, squared-round, modular, geometric, monoline, streamlined.
A heavy, geometric sans built from rounded-rectangle and superellipse-like forms, with broad horizontal spans and compact counters. Strokes stay mostly uniform, favoring straight segments with softened corners and occasional cut-in notches that create a distinctive, segmented rhythm (notably in E/S-like constructions). Curves are minimized and translated into squared bowls and rounded terminals, producing a clean, machined silhouette. Openings and internal spaces are often narrow and rectangular, and the overall spacing reads purposeful and display-oriented, with a slightly modular, constructed feel across capitals, lowercase, and figures.
Best suited for headlines, short statements, branding marks, and graphic-driven layouts where a bold, high-tech voice is desired. It works well for gaming and esports visuals, sci-fi or automotive-themed design, product packaging, and UI-style titling where its squared-round geometry can carry the identity.
The overall tone is futuristic and technical, evoking sci-fi interfaces, racing graphics, and late-20th/early-21st-century techno aesthetics. Its sturdy, blocky presence feels assertive and engineered, with a playful arcade flavor that comes from the rounded-square geometry and stencil-like interruptions.
The design appears intended to deliver a strong, futuristic display sans with a constructed, superellipse-based skeleton, prioritizing impact, speed, and a cohesive techno rhythm across the character set.
In text, the strong horizontal emphasis and tight counters create a dense, high-impact texture that holds up best at larger sizes. Several letters rely on simplified, geometric cues rather than traditional humanist detailing, giving the face a distinctive voice but making it more about style and momentum than long-form neutrality.