Sans Superellipse Umdi 6 is a very bold, wide, low contrast, upright, normal x-height font visually similar to 'Tactic Sans' by Miller Type Foundry (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: headlines, branding, posters, logotypes, packaging, tech, industrial, sporty, futuristic, confident, impact, modernity, systematic, robustness, tech tone, squared, rounded, blocky, geometric, compact.
A heavy, squared sans with generously rounded corners and superellipse-like bowls that read as softened rectangles. Strokes are uniform and crisp, with flat terminals and minimal modulation, producing a dense, high-impact texture. Counters are compact and often rectangular (notably in O/0 and P/D shapes), while diagonals in A, V, W, X, Y, and Z are cut cleanly for a sharp, engineered feel. The lowercase follows the same squared geometry with single-storey a and g, and the numerals echo the rectangular counter motif for a cohesive system.
Best suited for short to medium-length display settings such as headlines, brand marks, packaging, and promotional graphics where impact and a technical tone are desired. It can also work for UI labels and dashboard-style typography when a sturdy, squared aesthetic is the goal, especially at larger sizes.
The overall tone is modern and utilitarian, with a techno-industrial confidence. Its rounded-square construction suggests durability and precision—more “equipment label” than “editorial.” The bold massing and compact apertures give it an assertive, sporty energy that feels at home in contemporary UI and product contexts.
The design appears intended to translate rounded-rectangle geometry into a robust, contemporary sans that feels engineered and modern. By pairing compact counters with softened corners, it balances toughness with approachability while staying highly consistent across the glyph set.
Round-cornered corners and tight internal spaces create strong silhouette recognition at display sizes, while the square-ish rounds keep lines looking orderly and modular. The design maintains consistent corner radii across curves and joints, reinforcing a unified, systemized rhythm from caps through figures.