Sans Superellipse Umfa 5 is a very bold, very wide, monoline, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, logos, posters, game ui, tech branding, techno, futuristic, industrial, gaming, sci-fi, sci-fi display, digital interface, modular geometry, brand impact, systematic styling, rounded corners, square-rounded, geometric, blocky, modular.
A heavy, squared sans built from rounded-rectangle forms and softened corners, giving counters and bowls a superelliptical, "squircle" geometry. Strokes are consistently thick with minimal contrast, and terminals are blunt or gently radiused rather than tapered. Many letters use horizontal cut-ins and notch-like joins (notably in characters with bars and spines), creating a segmented, engineered feel while maintaining clear, open interior spaces. Overall spacing and proportions favor a broad, stable footprint and a crisp, display-oriented silhouette.
Best suited for headlines, titles, and brand marks where its squared-rounded geometry can read as intentional and distinctive. It performs well in tech and gaming contexts—UI labels, splash screens, esports identity, packaging, and posters—especially when set with generous tracking and ample size to showcase its engineered details.
The tone is unmistakably futuristic and machine-made, reading as technical, confident, and slightly aggressive. Its rounded-square construction adds a playful, arcade-like polish to an otherwise industrial voice, evoking interfaces, robotics, and sci‑fi branding.
This font appears designed to merge geometric squircle construction with a streamlined, digital voice—prioritizing impact, consistency, and a modular, interface-friendly rhythm. The notch and bar treatments suggest an aim for uniqueness and recognizability without drifting into decorative excess.
The design leans on repeatable shapes and consistent corner radii, producing strong patterning in runs of text. The numerals and lowercase follow the same squared logic, reinforcing a unified, system-like aesthetic that stays legible at larger sizes where the inner notches and cut-ins become part of the character.