Sans Superellipse Wiwo 10 is a bold, very wide, monoline, italic, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, logos, sports branding, tech ui, futuristic, tech, sporty, dynamic, industrial, convey speed, signal technology, modernize branding, create impact, rounded, extended, oblique, angular, streamlined.
A streamlined, oblique sans with extended proportions and a consistent, monoline stroke. Forms are built from rounded-rectangle geometry: corners are softened, counters are squarish, and curves resolve into flat-ish terminals rather than full circular arcs. The drawing emphasizes horizontal reach and forward-leaning rhythm, with compact apertures and frequent use of cut-in joins and notched transitions that keep shapes crisp. Uppercase and lowercase share a tight, engineered logic, and the numerals follow the same rounded, modular construction for a cohesive texture in settings.
Best suited to short-to-medium display settings where its forward motion and wide stance can be used intentionally—headlines, posters, product identities, esports/sports branding, and tech or gaming interfaces. It can also work for labels and signage-style copy when generous spacing and size preserve the interior shapes and prevent counters from feeling tight.
The overall tone reads fast, technical, and contemporary—like interface labeling, motorsport graphics, or sci‑fi UI typography. Its oblique stance and extended width project motion and urgency, while the rounded-rect construction keeps it polished and product-like rather than aggressive or distressed.
The design appears aimed at a modern, speed-oriented aesthetic built from modular rounded-rectangle forms. Its consistent stroke and engineered curves suggest an intention to feel digital and aerodynamic, delivering strong presence and clear, stylized word shapes in branding and display typography.
Distinctive superelliptical counters and flattened curves give the face a recognizable “panel” silhouette, especially in rounded letters and numerals. The italic slant is strong enough to shape word images noticeably, and the uniform stroke weight produces an even, synthetic color across lines of text.