Sans Superellipse Adbuh 5 is a regular weight, normal width, monoline, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: ui design, signage, branding, logotypes, headlines, futuristic, tech, geometric, clean, friendly, modernization, system consistency, tech voice, legibility, rounded corners, square-round, modular, low contrast, open apertures.
A geometric sans built from rounded-rectangle and superellipse-like forms, with consistently softened corners and largely uniform stroke thickness. Curves tend to resolve into flat-ish, squared terminals, giving bowls and counters a squarish roundness rather than purely circular geometry. The overall rhythm is even and modular, with relatively open apertures and simplified constructions that keep forms crisp at display sizes. Character widths vary naturally across the set, but the design maintains a tight, engineered consistency through repeated radii and straight-to-curve transitions.
Well suited to interface typography, product branding, and wayfinding where a clean, modern voice is needed. The rounded-rect geometry also lends itself to logos and headlines in technology, gaming, and contemporary packaging, while remaining clear enough for short paragraphs and UI labels.
The tone reads modern and tech-forward, with a sleek, interface-like precision softened by rounded corners. It feels contemporary and approachable rather than austere, projecting a streamlined, sci‑fi/industrial sensibility that remains legible and calm in running text.
The design appears intended to merge a futuristic, engineered aesthetic with friendly rounding for broad usability. Its repeated corner radii and squared curves suggest a system-first approach aimed at consistency across alphabets and numerals, optimized for modern screen and product contexts.
Several shapes emphasize squared curves and rounded joints, producing a distinctive “soft rectangle” silhouette across both caps and lowercase. The figures follow the same logic, staying simple and geometric, and the overall impression is of a cohesive system built from shared modular parts.