Sans Superellipse Wama 3 is a bold, very wide, monoline, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, branding, posters, packaging, signage, futuristic, techy, industrial, sporty, sci‑fi, impact, modernize, brandability, tech aesthetic, modular coherence, rounded corners, square-oval, extended, geometric, compact counters.
A geometric sans built from squared, superelliptical shapes with consistently rounded corners and even stroke weight. Curves resolve into soft rectangles rather than true circles, giving bowls and terminals a crisp, engineered feel. Proportions are markedly extended, with broad uppercase forms and wide, low-impact curves that keep lines steady and horizontal. Counters are compact and rectangular, apertures are controlled, and diagonals (as in A, V, W, X, Y) are clean and rigid, reinforcing a mechanical rhythm. Numerals follow the same square-oval logic, with streamlined forms and minimal contrast.
Best suited to display typography where its extended proportions and squared-round geometry can be appreciated—headlines, logos, product naming, posters, and bold interface or control-panel style labels. It can also work for short bursts of copy in sports, tech, gaming, or automotive contexts where a strong, engineered voice is desired.
The overall tone is modern and synthetic, suggesting technology, machinery, and digital interfaces. Its wide stance and rounded-rectangle vocabulary read as confident and high-performance, with a subtle retro-future flavor reminiscent of sci‑fi titling and athletic branding.
The design appears intended to deliver a distinctive, wide, futuristic sans with rounded-rectangle construction for high-impact communication. By standardizing corner radii and keeping stroke weight even, it aims for a clean, modular system that feels technical and brandable across titles, marks, and signage.
Spacing and silhouette emphasize continuity: repeated corner radii and flattened curves create a cohesive texture at display sizes. The design favors closed, boxy interior spaces and short joins, which strengthens a compact, emblematic look but can make small sizes feel dense if set too tightly.