Sans Superellipse Imnof 7 is a very bold, very wide, monoline, italic, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, logotypes, esports, posters, packaging, futuristic, techy, racing, sporty, aggressive, speed cue, tech branding, display impact, systematic geometry, squared round, streamlined, angular, extended, forward-leaning.
A heavy, forward-slanted sans with rounded-rectangle construction and a distinctly squared-off curvature. Strokes are uniform and thick, with generous interior counters kept open through wide proportions and chamfered corners. Terminals tend to be clipped or horizontally finished, and many joins form crisp, geometric angles that keep the rhythm tight even at large sizes. Numerals and capitals follow the same superelliptical logic, with compact apertures and consistent stroke behavior across the set.
Best suited to short, high-impact settings such as headlines, brand marks, team or event identities, product titling, and display copy in posters or packaging. It also fits UI or HUD-style graphics and motion design where a streamlined, high-tech voice is desired; for long passages, larger sizes and added tracking will help maintain legibility.
The overall tone is fast, synthetic, and performance-oriented, evoking motorsport graphics, sci‑fi interfaces, and late-20th/early-21st-century tech branding. Its slanted stance and blocky rounding communicate motion and confidence, leaning toward an assertive, engineered feel rather than friendly neutrality.
The font appears designed to deliver a cohesive futuristic display voice built from superelliptical geometry, emphasizing speed and solidity. Its consistent corner treatment and uniform stroke weight suggest an intention to look engineered and modern across both text samples and alphanumeric sets.
The design maintains a cohesive system of rounded corners and cut-in notches that help separate similar shapes while reinforcing a mechanical aesthetic. The italic angle is integral to the letterforms (not simply obliqued), and the spacing in the sample text reads best when set with comfortable tracking to preserve clarity between dense strokes.