Sans Superellipse Ukkev 2 is a bold, normal width, low contrast, upright, normal x-height font visually similar to 'FS Benjamin' by Fontsmith, 'Kirkly' by Kirk Font Studio, 'Metroluna' by Locomotype, 'Levnam' by ParaType, and 'LFT Arnoldo' by TypeTogether (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: branding, headlines, posters, packaging, ui labels, friendly, modern, solid, approachable, confident, approachability, modern clarity, strong presence, geometric softness, rounded, soft corners, compact, geometric, clean.
A heavy, rounded sans with a superellipse-influenced skeleton: bowls and counters read as squarish rounds with softened corners rather than true circles. Strokes are consistently thick with minimal contrast, and terminals are blunt and clean. Proportions feel compact with generous inner counters for the weight; curves are broad and steady, producing an even texture in text. The lowercase shows simple, sturdy constructions (single-storey a and g), while capitals are wide and stable with smooth joins and restrained detailing.
This style is well suited to branding and short, high-impact text where a warm, contemporary presence is desired. It can work effectively in display sizes for posters and packaging, and also for UI labels and callouts where a sturdy, friendly sans helps readability and tone.
The overall tone is friendly and contemporary, with a dependable, slightly playful sturdiness. Rounded geometry and broad curves soften the weight, keeping the font approachable while still feeling assertive and clear.
The design appears intended to blend geometric clarity with softened, rounded forms, creating a modern display sans that stays approachable. Its consistent stroke weight and compact, squarish-round shapes prioritize strong silhouette recognition and a smooth, even rhythm in text.
Numerals appear wide and highly legible, matching the same rounded-rectangle logic; the 0 is an oval/squircle form and the 1 is a simple vertical with minimal adornment. Diacritics or punctuation aren’t shown here, but the displayed set suggests a consistent, tightly controlled rounded vocabulary across straight and curved strokes.