Sans Superellipse Myfa 7 is a very bold, narrow, medium contrast, upright, normal x-height font visually similar to 'Policia Secreta' by Woodcutter (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: headlines, posters, sports branding, packaging, signage, industrial, sports, poster, retro, punchy, impact, space saving, technical edge, display branding, compact, blocky, rounded corners, squared curves, ink-trap feel.
A compact, heavy sans with rounded-rectangle construction and softened corners throughout. Strokes are consistently thick with modest contrast, producing dense counters and a strongly rectangular rhythm. Curves are squarish and superelliptical rather than circular, and many joins show subtle notches and cut-ins that feel like ink-trap or stencil-adjacent detailing. The overall texture is tight and vertical, with minimal curvature on terminals and a sturdy, engineered silhouette.
Best suited for short, high-visibility text such as headlines, posters, and punchy taglines where its dense weight and compact width maximize impact. It also fits sports branding, packaging, and signage that benefit from an industrial, label-like presence. Use generous tracking and adequate size when legibility is critical due to the tight counters.
The font projects a tough, high-impact tone that reads as utilitarian and assertive. Its compact geometry and rounded-square curves evoke industrial labeling and athletic branding, with a distinctly retro display flavor. The built-in notches add a technical edge that keeps the heaviness from feeling soft or bubbly.
The design appears intended as a high-impact display sans that combines rounded-rectangle geometry with technical cut-ins to improve separation in heavy strokes. Its narrow, compact proportions suggest a goal of fitting strong messaging into limited horizontal space while maintaining a bold, branded look.
Uppercase forms are particularly monolithic and narrow, while lowercase keeps a similarly compressed footprint with firmly squared bowls. Numerals are bold and sign-like, staying consistent with the rounded-rectangular construction. At smaller sizes the tight apertures and dense counters may reduce clarity, while larger settings emphasize its strong, iconic shapes.