Sans Superellipse Wimu 7 is a bold, very wide, monoline, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, logotypes, posters, ui display, gaming, futuristic, tech, sci‑fi, industrial, arcade, tech branding, sci‑fi titling, interface voice, geometric cohesion, impactful display, rounded corners, capsule forms, square-round, modular, streamlined.
A heavy, rounded-rectilinear sans built from smooth, monoline strokes and superelliptical curves. Corners are generously radiused and terminals often finish as soft, horizontal capsules, producing a continuous, machined silhouette rather than calligraphic modulation. Many letters favor open apertures and simplified joins, with squared-off bowls and rounded interior corners that keep counters legible while maintaining a compact, modular rhythm. The overall impression is geometric and engineered, with wide, stable proportions and consistent stroke behavior across letters and figures.
Best suited to display sizes where its rounded-rect geometry and bold presence can carry branding and titling. It works well for tech products, gaming and esports graphics, sci‑fi or automotive posters, and interface headings where a sleek, engineered voice is desirable. Short to medium text lines can be effective when you want a strong, graphic rhythm more than a neutral reading texture.
The tone reads futuristic and technical, reminiscent of interface lettering, aerospace branding, and classic sci‑fi titling. Its rounded rectangles and flattened terminals give it an industrial, manufactured feel that can also nod to retro arcade and synth-era aesthetics. The bold, smooth forms project confidence and speed rather than warmth or tradition.
The design appears intended to translate superelliptical, rounded-rectangle construction into a cohesive alphabet that feels modern and machine-made. By emphasizing capsule terminals, simplified joins, and consistent radiusing, it aims to deliver a distinctive techno voice that remains clean and highly repeatable across letters and numbers.
Distinctive horizontal cut-ins and bar-like terminals show up in several glyphs, adding a subtle "slot" motif that reinforces the techno character. Curved letters like C, G, O, and S are drawn with squared curves and controlled rounding, keeping the family visually coherent and strongly geometric. Numerals follow the same capsule-and-slot logic, yielding a consistent texture in mixed alphanumeric settings.