Sans Superellipse Wubo 11 is a very bold, very wide, medium contrast, upright, tall x-height font visually similar to 'PODIUM Sharp' by Machalski (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: headlines, posters, branding, packaging, logos, playful, retro, chunky, friendly, cartoonish, impact, playfulness, retro appeal, logo readiness, rounded, blocky, soft corners, compressed counters, ink-trap feel.
A heavy, rounded display sans built from squarish curves and softened corners, giving letters a superelliptical, padded silhouette. Strokes are broad and fairly even, with tight internal counters and compact apertures that emphasize mass over delicacy. Many joins and terminals show subtle notches and cut-ins that read like ink-trap-inspired shaping, adding texture and a slightly engineered rhythm. Uppercase forms are wide and sturdy, while lowercase keeps a large body and simple construction, producing a dense, high-impact texture in words and lines.
Best suited to display settings such as posters, large headlines, brand marks, and packaging where strong silhouette and high contrast against the background matter most. It also fits playful UI moments (badges, titles, splash screens) and short, punchy phrases where its dense texture remains readable.
The overall tone is bold and upbeat with a retro, arcade-to-toybox energy. Its chunky forms and rounded rectangles feel friendly and approachable, with a hint of comic exuberance that makes headlines feel loud, fun, and confident.
The design appears intended to deliver maximum visual impact through wide, rounded geometry and compact counters, while adding character via small cut-ins that keep the shapes from feeling purely monolithic. It aims for a friendly, retro-leaning display voice that stays legible in bold, attention-grabbing applications.
The figures are equally robust and geometric, with a squared-off, rounded-rectangle logic that matches the letterforms. At smaller sizes the tight counters and heavy weight can fill in visually, while at large sizes the notches and softened corners become a defining stylistic signature.