Sans Superellipse Olnay 6 is a bold, normal width, low contrast, upright, normal x-height font visually similar to 'Cybersport' by Anton Kokoshka, 'Midsole' by Grype, 'Nusara' by Locomotype, 'Pancetta Pro' by Mint Type, and 'Ranelte' by insigne (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: headlines, display, branding, packaging, ui labels, techy, industrial, friendly, confident, utilitarian, systematic design, modern branding, high impact, screen-forward, rounded corners, squared bowls, compact, sturdy, monolinear.
A heavy, monolinear sans with forms built from rounded rectangles and softened corners. Strokes maintain consistent thickness, with broad, compact counters and a generally square-leaning geometry that keeps curves tight and controlled. Terminals are blunt and rounded rather than tapered, and many joins read as engineered and modular. Proportions skew slightly condensed in feel despite variable letter widths, producing a dense, stable texture in text.
Best suited for headlines, short text, and display settings where its bold, compact shapes can carry strong visual presence. It works well for branding and packaging that want a modern, engineered feel, and for UI labels or signage where sturdy, simplified forms help maintain clarity at a glance.
The overall tone is modern and tech-forward, blending a utilitarian, industrial sturdiness with approachable rounding. It feels confident and pragmatic rather than elegant, with a subtle retro-digital flavor that suits contemporary interface and product contexts.
The design appears intended to translate superelliptic, rounded-rect geometry into a cohesive, high-impact sans that feels systematic and contemporary. Its consistent stroke weight and compact counters suggest an emphasis on robustness and clear, assertive communication in modern layouts.
The uppercase set reads especially blocky and structural, while the lowercase maintains the same squared, rounded-corner logic for consistency. Numerals share the same compact, rounded-rect silhouette, reinforcing a uniform, system-like rhythm across alphanumerics.