Sans Superellipse Maneh 7 is a bold, normal width, low contrast, italic, normal x-height font.
Keywords: sports branding, technology, gaming, headlines, app ui, futuristic, sporty, playful, techy, friendly, convey speed, modernize tone, improve friendliness, create impact, digital fit, rounded, soft corners, geometric, compact, streamlined.
A rounded, forward-leaning sans with superellipse-like bowls and corners that read as softened rectangles rather than pure circles. Strokes are heavy and consistent, with smooth, ink-trap-free joins and a generally compact footprint that keeps counters tight but clear. Terminals are blunt and rounded, and the design favors continuous curves and broad radii, producing a cohesive, aerodynamic rhythm across uppercase, lowercase, and numerals. The overall spacing feels even and controlled, supporting clean word shapes in running text.
Well-suited to branding and display contexts where motion and modernity are desirable—sports identities, esports/gaming graphics, tech product pages, packaging accents, and promotional headlines. It can also work for short UI labels or dashboards when a distinctive, streamlined voice is needed, though its heavy forms suggest using generous sizes and spacing for best clarity.
The font projects a modern, fast, and slightly playful tone—more “performance UI” and “sports branding” than formal editorial. Its rounded geometry and italic slant add friendliness and motion, giving headlines an energetic, tech-forward flavor without looking aggressive.
The design appears intended to blend geometric, rounded-rectangular construction with an italicized sense of velocity, creating a distinctive contemporary sans for branding and interface-adjacent typography. Consistent stroke weight and softened corners prioritize a cohesive, digital-friendly silhouette that stays recognizable at a glance.
Uppercase forms appear more monoline and modular, while lowercase introduces livelier, more cursive-like movement in strokes and joins, reinforcing the sense of speed. Numerals follow the same rounded-rectangle logic, with simplified, screen-friendly shapes that match the alphabet’s compactness.