Okay, so to satisfy requirements 5, 6, and 7, the soft-clipping function will have the form:
$$ f(x) = K \int\limits_{0}^{x} \big(1 - u^2 \big)^N \ du \quad \text{ for } |x|\le 1 $$
$K$ is a constant chosen to satisfy requirement 4.
The 1st derivative of $f(x)$ is
$$ f'(x) = K \big(1 - x^2 \big)^N $$
and the $n$th derivative is
$$ f^{(n)}(x) = K \big(1 - x^2 \big)^{N-n+1}g(x) $$
where $g(x)$ is the $(n-1)$th derivative of $-x^2$ and some other non-infinite stuff (I wouldn't mind if someone straightens this out). Nonetheless, when $x = \pm 1$, then $f^{(n)}(x) = 0$ for $1 \le n < N-1$.
The integrand is a binomial and can be expressed as a power series using binomial expansion:
$$\begin{align} \big(1 - u^2 \big)^N & = \sum\limits_{n=0}^{N} \binom{N}{n} \big(-u^2\big)^n (1)^{N-n} \\ & = \sum\limits_{n=0}^{N} \frac{N!}{n!(N-n)!} \big(-u^2\big)^n (1)^{N-n} \\ & = \sum\limits_{n=0}^{N} \frac{N!}{n!(N-n)!} (-1)^n u^{2n} \\ \end{align}$$
So the integral can be expressed as an integral of a power series:
$$\begin{align} \int\limits_{0}^{x} \big(1 - u^2 \big)^N \ du & = \int\limits_{0}^{x} \sum\limits_{n=0}^{N} \frac{N!}{n!(N-n)!} (-1)^n u^{2n} \ du \\ & = \sum\limits_{n=0}^{N} \frac{N!}{n!(N-n)!} (-1)^n \int\limits_{0}^{x} u^{2n} \ du \\ & = \sum\limits_{n=0}^{N} \frac{N!}{n!(N-n)!} \frac{(-1)^n}{2n+1} u^{2n+1} \Bigg|_0^x \\ & = \sum\limits_{n=0}^{N} \frac{N!}{n!(N-n)!} \frac{(-1)^n}{2n+1} x^{2n+1} \\ & = x \sum\limits_{n=0}^{N} \frac{N!}{n!(N-n)!} \frac{(-1)^n}{2n+1} \big(x^2 \big)^n \\ \end{align}$$
When $x = \pm 1$, we get
$$ \int\limits_{0}^{\pm 1} \big(1 - u^2 \big)^N \ du = \pm \sum\limits_{n=0}^{N} \frac{N!}{n!(N-n)!} \frac{(-1)^n}{2n+1} $$
(there is a little improperness in the integral limit.) So the scaler $K$ must be
$$ K = \frac{1}{ \sum\limits_{n=0}^{N} \frac{N!}{n!(N-n)!} \frac{(-1)^n}{2n+1} }$$
This makes the entire soft-clipping function to be:
$$ f(x) = \begin{cases} -1 & x \le -1 \\ \frac{ x \sum\limits_{n=0}^{N} \frac{N!}{n!(N-n)!} \frac{(-1)^n}{2n+1} \big(x^2 \big)^n}{ \sum\limits_{n=0}^{N} \frac{N!}{n!(N-n)!} \frac{(-1)^n}{2n+1} } \quad & -1 \le x \le +1 \\ +1 & +1 \le x \\ \end{cases} $$
and it appears that the odd-power (that is the power = $2n+1$) polynomial coefficients are
$$ a_n = \frac{ \frac{N!}{n!(N-n)!} \frac{(-1)^n}{2n+1}}{ \sum\limits_{i=0}^{N} \frac{N!}{i!(N-i)!} \frac{(-1)^i}{2i+1} } $$
The polynomials (without splicing to the $\operatorname{sgn}(x) = \pm 1$ saturated components) look like
I think the order $2N+1$ starts at 1 and goes to 9 (or $0 \le N \le 4$)
With the saturation attached, the curves look like
The soft-clipping function is continuous everywhere and all derivatives, up to the $(2N-1)$th derivative is continuous everywhere and the $2N$th derivative and higher is continuous everywhere except at the splices at $x = \pm 1$.
Here are the same set of curves but with the scaling adjusted so that the slope around $x=0$ (or "gain") remains at 1 (or "0 dB gain").
The point of discontinuity (where the polynomial is spliced to a constant $\pm 1$) is at $x= \pm K$. I really don't think one needs to get over a $7$th-order ($N=3$) softclipper. Oversampling by 4x suffices to deal it this $7$th-order polynomial.