Sans Superellipse Gyluh 1 is a very bold, normal width, monoline, upright, normal x-height font visually similar to 'Febrotesk 4F' by 4th february and 'Revx Neue' and 'Revx Neue Rounded' by OneSevenPointFive (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: headlines, posters, logos, packaging, wayfinding, industrial, techy, sporty, confident, modern, impact, modernization, clarity, branding, rounded, squared, blocky, compact, sturdy.
A heavy, monoline sans built from rounded-rectangle geometry, with softened corners and broadly squared bowls. The forms feel compact and engineered, relying on straight stems, flat terminals, and consistent stroke weight. Counters are relatively tight and often rectangular/obround, while curves resolve into squarish arcs rather than true circles, giving letters and numerals a stable, machined silhouette. Lowercase mixes single-storey constructions (notably a and g) with short ascenders and a sturdy, low-contrast rhythm that holds together at large sizes.
Best used where impact and clarity are needed: headlines, posters, product/packaging fronts, sports or tech branding, and bold UI or wayfinding labels. The dense counters and strong, compact shapes favor larger sizes and short-to-medium text runs over long-form reading.
The overall tone is bold and assertive, with a technical, industrial cleanliness. Its rounded-square construction softens the impact just enough to feel contemporary and approachable, while still reading as strong and utilitarian—well suited to energetic, modern branding.
The design appears intended to deliver a high-impact, contemporary sans with a cohesive rounded-square motif—combining a strong, space-efficient silhouette with friendly corner rounding for modern display use.
Distinctive superelliptical bowls and squared apertures give a consistent “rounded-corner rectangle” theme across caps, lowercase, and figures. The punctuation and spacing in the sample suggest a dense, headline-forward texture where the dark mass and simplified shapes are the primary visual drivers.