Sans Superellipse Gener 7 is a very bold, normal width, low contrast, italic, normal x-height font visually similar to 'Bronkoh' by Brink, 'Flexo Soft' by Durotype, and 'Obvia' by Typefolio (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: headlines, posters, sports branding, packaging, app headers, sporty, punchy, confident, energetic, modern, impact, speed, branding, display, modernity, slanted, rounded, compact, blocky, friendly.
A heavy, slanted sans with rounded-rectangle construction and broad, uniform strokes. Curves are smooth and squarish rather than circular, giving bowls and counters a superelliptical feel, while terminals are clean and largely unadorned. The overall silhouette is compact and sturdy, with tight apertures in letters like a, e, and s, and emphatic diagonals in forms such as k, v, w, x, and y. Figures are robust and simple, matching the letterforms with consistent stroke weight and controlled, geometric curvature.
Best suited for headlines, poster typography, and bold branding where immediacy and impact matter. It can work well for sports and fitness identities, product packaging, and UI headers that need a compact, energetic voice. In longer passages it creates a dense texture, making it most effective when used large with adequate spacing.
The font projects a bold, forward-leaning energy that reads as athletic and assertive. Its rounded geometry keeps the tone approachable, balancing toughness with a contemporary friendliness. The strong, compact shapes create a sense of momentum and impact suited to attention-grabbing headlines.
The design appears intended to deliver maximum visual punch through a compact, geometric sans structure, combining rounded-rectangle forms with a built-in slant for speed and emphasis. It prioritizes bold, high-contrast-in-scale shapes (rather than stroke contrast) and a cohesive, modern rhythm across letters and figures.
The italic slant is built into the structure rather than added as a simple shear, with diagonals and joins that feel intentional and stable. Counters remain fairly tight at display sizes, which reinforces the dense, high-impact texture in longer lines of text.