Sans Superellipse Hunol 5 is a very bold, narrow, low contrast, upright, tall x-height font visually similar to 'Rhode' by Font Bureau, 'FF Good' and 'FF Good Headline' by FontFont, 'CF Blast Gothic' by Fonts.GR, and 'Gratique' by Lemon Studio Type (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: headlines, posters, sports branding, packaging, signage, industrial, assertive, sporty, retro, utilitarian, space saving, high impact, sturdy forms, signage clarity, condensed, blocky, rounded corners, flat terminals, compact counters.
A compact, condensed sans with heavy, uniform strokes and rounded-rectangle construction in bowls and curves. Letterforms feel tightly engineered: counters are small and relatively closed, apertures are restrained, and terminals are predominantly flat with minimal modulation. Rounds (such as O, C, and 0) read as squarish superellipses, while diagonals (V, W, X, Y) are sturdy and angular without becoming brittle. The overall texture is dense and dark, with consistent weight distribution and a strong vertical rhythm.
Best suited to headlines, posters, and short, high-impact messaging where a dense, powerful texture is desirable. It also fits sports and event branding, packaging panels, labels, and bold signage that benefits from compact width and strong silhouette recognition.
The font projects an assertive, no-nonsense voice with an industrial and sporty edge. Its compact shapes and squared rounds evoke utilitarian signage and retro display typography, leaning more powerful than friendly. The tone is direct and attention-grabbing, designed to hold visual ground in crowded layouts.
The design appears intended to deliver maximum impact in minimal horizontal space, using squared-round geometry to stay crisp and sturdy. It prioritizes bold presence and consistent rhythm over openness, aiming for a confident display voice that remains clean and modern.
At larger sizes it delivers a bold, poster-like presence; in longer lines the dense color and tight internal spaces can make words feel compact and forceful. Numerals follow the same squarish, blocky logic, reinforcing a unified, heavy display character across letters and figures.