Sans Superellipse Umte 6 is a bold, wide, monoline, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: logotypes, headlines, posters, app ui, packaging, futuristic, tech, geometric, industrial, sporty, interface tone, tech branding, modular system, impact display, rounded, squared-off, compact, blocky, streamlined.
A geometric sans with rounded-rectangle construction and consistently softened corners throughout. Strokes are uniform and heavy, with generous radii producing smooth, superelliptic bowls and squared terminals that feel engineered rather than calligraphic. Counters are compact and often rectangular-oval, giving letters like O, D, P, and R a boxed, modular look. The design favors straight segments and controlled curves, with simplified joins and a steady rhythm that reads cleanly at display sizes; numerals follow the same rounded, segmented logic, with the 2 and 3 built from horizontal bars and curved corners.
Best suited to logotypes, headlines, and short bursts of text where its bold, rounded-rect geometry can read as a deliberate style. It also fits UI titles, product labels, and packaging that aims for a contemporary tech or sport aesthetic. For long-form text, its dense counters and strong shapes are more effective in larger sizes or with ample spacing.
The overall tone is modern and synthetic, evoking interfaces, machinery labeling, and sci‑fi branding. Its rounded-square geometry feels friendly enough to avoid harshness, but still delivers a precise, technical attitude. The weight and broad silhouettes project confidence and impact, lending a sporty, high-performance feel.
The design appears intended to translate the logic of rounded rectangles into an alphabet optimized for strong, modern branding. By keeping strokes monoline and corners consistently radiused, it creates a cohesive, modular system that feels engineered for contemporary display use.
Several glyphs lean into distinctive, modular decisions—such as the angular, bar-driven construction of S/2/3 and the compact, squared counters—creating a recognizable voice. The lowercase maintains the same geometric discipline as the uppercase, with single-storey a and g and minimal modulation for a consistent, system-like texture.