Sans Superellipse Ussu 5 is a bold, very wide, medium contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, logos, packaging, signage, techy, futuristic, industrial, confident, clean, modern branding, tech aesthetic, display impact, geometric clarity, rounded, squared, blocky, geometric, streamlined.
A geometric sans built from rounded-rectangle and superelliptic shapes, with broad proportions and a sturdy, even stroke presence. Corners are consistently softened, counters tend toward squarish ovals, and curves transition smoothly into straight segments for a machined, controlled feel. Terminals are clean and mostly straight-cut, with wide bowls and apertures that stay compact and rectangular rather than circular. Numerals and capitals read as stable and monolinear, emphasizing flat horizontals, wide shoulders, and gently radiused corners throughout.
Best suited to display typography where its wide, geometric shapes can define a strong visual identity—headlines, branding marks, packaging, and large-format signage. It also works well for tech or product-oriented layouts that benefit from a clean, engineered tone and a compact, modern texture.
The overall tone is modern and technical, suggesting engineered products, interfaces, and forward-looking branding. Its wide stance and rounded-square geometry convey strength and confidence while keeping a friendly edge through softened corners.
The font appears designed to deliver a contemporary, tech-forward voice by combining wide proportions with rounded-square construction and consistent corner radii. The intention seems focused on creating a distinctive, highly legible display sans that feels modern and manufactured without becoming sharp or aggressive.
The design language stays highly consistent across uppercase, lowercase, and figures, especially in the repeated rounded-rectangle motif visible in O/Q/0 and the squared bowls in B/P/R. The sample text shows an even, steady rhythm at display sizes, with a distinctive, contemporary silhouette created by the wide set and rounded-square counters.