Sans Superellipse Gurig 5 is a regular weight, normal width, monoline, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: branding, technology, ui labels, headlines, posters, futuristic, tech, playful, clean, retro, tech aesthetic, brand voice, geometric consistency, friendly futurism, rounded, geometric, squarish, soft corners, wide apertures.
A rounded, geometric sans with a strong superellipse/rounded-rectangle construction. Strokes are uniform and smooth, with generous corner radii and a consistent, engineered rhythm across caps and lowercase. Counters tend toward squarish inner shapes, and many forms favor open apertures and simplified joins, giving letters a modular, display-friendly silhouette. Curves are restrained and often transition into straight-ish segments, producing a distinctive “soft-square” feel rather than purely circular rounds.
Works best in branding, headlines, posters, and technology-oriented visuals where a modern, geometric voice is desired. It can also serve well for short UI labels, product names, and packaging when a friendly futuristic tone fits the system. Longer passages may benefit from larger sizes or increased tracking to keep the dense, rounded forms from feeling busy.
The overall tone feels futuristic and tech-forward, with a friendly, toy-like softness from the rounded corners. Its stylized geometry suggests retro-digital and space-age influences while staying clean and approachable. The alphabet reads as designed and intentional rather than neutral, making it feel branded and characterful.
The design appears intended to merge a clean sans foundation with a superellipse-driven, rounded-rect aesthetic, creating a distinctive tech display look that stays approachable. Its consistent monoline construction and modular curves suggest an emphasis on uniformity, clarity, and strong logo-like presence.
Distinctive construction shows up in the angular-yet-rounded bowls and the squared counters in letters like B, D, O, and 0. Lowercase details (such as the single-storey a, open c/e, and compact r) keep the texture lively, while the numerals maintain the same rounded-rect logic for a cohesive set. The design remains legible at display sizes, where the inner shapes and corner treatments are most apparent.