Sans Superellipse Uhby 2 is a bold, wide, monoline, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, branding, packaging, ui labels, techy, utilitarian, industrial, retro-digital, boldly friendly, impactful clarity, technical feel, friendly geometry, distinctive detailing, rounded corners, squared bowls, soft terminals, compact counters, stencil-like cuts.
A heavy, geometric sans built from rounded-rectangle (superellipse-like) forms, with consistent stroke thickness and softened outer corners. Curves are boxy and controlled, producing squarish bowls in letters like O, D, and P, while joins and terminals stay clean and blunt rather than tapered. Counters are relatively tight and often rectangular, giving the face a dense, sturdy color in text. Several glyphs show deliberate cut-ins or notches (notably in S, g, and e), adding a subtle engineered, display-oriented detail without breaking overall uniformity.
Best suited to display settings where its dense weight and rounded-rect geometry can read as intentional: headlines, product branding, packaging, signage, and interface labels. It can also work for short blocks of text or captions when ample size and spacing are available, as the compact counters and heavy texture can feel tight in longer reading.
The overall tone reads modern and technical, with a confident, workmanlike presence. The rounded corners keep it approachable, while the squared geometry and occasional cut details suggest hardware, robotics, and UI systems. It balances a retro digital flavor with contemporary cleanliness.
The design appears intended to deliver a strong, system-like sans with softened edges—combining industrial robustness with friendly rounding. The added cut-in details suggest a desire for distinctiveness and a slightly futuristic, engineered personality while keeping the letterforms highly regular and buildable.
Capitals are broad and stable with minimal contrast between straight and curved strokes, and the lowercase maintains a consistent, modular rhythm. The numerals match the same rounded-rectangle construction; the 0 is especially squarish, and the 1 is simple and upright, supporting clear, no-nonsense numeric styling. The distinctive notched constructions in a few letters add character and can become a focal point at larger sizes.