Sans Superellipse Kuhy 4 is a bold, wide, low contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, branding, posters, logos, packaging, futuristic, tech, friendly, modular, retro, sci-fi aesthetic, ui feel, geometric consistency, display impact, rounded, superelliptic, geometric, soft-cornered, monoline.
A rounded, geometric sans built from superellipse-like strokes and counters. Letterforms are wide with smooth, softened corners and near-monoline construction, producing a consistent, engineered texture across lines. Many bowls and interior spaces resolve as rounded rectangles, and terminals tend to be blunt or gently curved rather than tapered, giving the design a clean, synthetic rhythm. The overall spacing and proportions favor a stable, horizontal feel, with simplified joins and uncluttered silhouettes that stay legible at display sizes.
Best suited to headlines and short-form text where its distinctive rounded-square geometry can be a feature rather than a distraction. It works well for tech branding, gaming and entertainment graphics, product packaging, and poster typography, especially when a clean, futuristic flavor is desired. For extended reading, it will typically perform better in larger sizes and with generous leading.
The font projects a futuristic, user-interface tone with a friendly edge. Its soft geometry and rounded-square logic evoke sci‑fi signage, digital dashboards, and late-20th-century tech aesthetics without feeling harsh. The result is upbeat and approachable, more playful than corporate, while still reading as precise and systematic.
The design appears intended to translate rounded-rectangle geometry into a cohesive alphabet that feels modern and systematized. By emphasizing softened corners, uniform stroke weight, and simplified constructions, it aims to deliver a distinctive display sans that reads as technological, approachable, and highly consistent across letters and numerals.
Figures follow the same rounded-rectangle DNA as the letters, with a notably squarish ‘0’ that includes a centered dot. Uppercase and lowercase share a cohesive construction, keeping a unified voice in mixed-case settings and reinforcing the font’s modular, screen-ready character.