Sans Superellipse Myke 7 is a very bold, normal width, medium contrast, italic, normal x-height font.
Keywords: sports branding, headlines, posters, packaging, logos, sporty, dynamic, industrial, retro, impact, motion, ruggedness, modernity, rounded corners, oblique slant, compact, chunky, squared curves.
A heavy, oblique sans with blocky proportions and consistently rounded corners. Curves resolve into squarish, superellipse-like bowls and counters, giving letters like O, D, and Q a rounded-rectangle footprint rather than a true circle. Strokes are sturdy and mostly uniform, with crisp terminals and occasional ink-trap-like notches at joins that sharpen the internal rhythm. Numerals and capitals feel compact and sturdy, while the lowercase maintains clear, straightforward forms with tight apertures and a generally forward-leaning texture.
Best suited for short-to-medium display settings where impact and motion are desirable: sports and esports branding, event posters, punchy headlines, product packaging, and logotypes. It can also work for signage or UI accents when a bold, engineered voice is needed, though the dense forms favor larger sizes over long-form text.
The overall tone is assertive and energetic, with a streamlined, engineered feel. Its rounded-rectangle geometry reads modern-industrial, while the slanted stance and chunky weight suggest speed, impact, and a slightly retro athletic attitude.
Likely designed to deliver maximum visual punch with a forward-moving stance and a geometric, rounded-rectangle construction. The combination of chunky strokes, tight counters, and softened corners aims to balance toughness with approachability, creating a distinctive display voice that feels fast, modern, and built.
The design maintains strong consistency between straight segments and softened corners, producing a clean, mechanical rhythm across lines. The forward slant is prominent enough to create motion, yet the letterforms remain stable and legible at display sizes. Round characters keep a controlled squareness, which helps the face feel more technical than playful despite the softened edges.