Sans Superellipse Ukbab 2 is a bold, normal width, monoline, upright, normal x-height font visually similar to 'Digital Sans Now' by Elsner+Flake, 'Digital Serial' by SoftMaker, 'Digital TS' by TypeShop Collection, and 'Domyouji' and 'Kimberley' by Typodermic (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: headlines, logos, branding, posters, packaging, tech, industrial, futuristic, sporty, utilitarian, modernize, signal tech, maximize impact, logo clarity, industrial tone, squared, rounded corners, geometric, compact, stencil-like.
A heavy geometric sans built from rounded-rectangle and superellipse shapes, with flat terminals, softened corners, and largely uniform stroke thickness. The outlines favor squared bowls and counters, producing a compact, blocky rhythm with wide internal radii and minimal contrast. Curves are controlled and boxy rather than circular, and diagonals (as in A, K, V, W, X, Y) are crisp and clean. Numerals and capitals read sturdy and engineered, with generous weight and tight-looking apertures that keep the texture dense at display sizes.
Best suited to short-form, high-impact typography such as headlines, titles, sports or tech branding, product marks, and packaging. The dense, squared-round forms stay bold and legible at larger sizes and in high-contrast applications, while extended paragraph text may feel heavy and tightly enclosed.
The overall tone is technical and assertive, suggesting engineered hardware, digital interfaces, and modern industrial design. Its squared rounding adds a friendly softness without losing a disciplined, machined feel, landing in a contemporary “tech brand” space rather than a humanist one.
The design appears aimed at delivering a modern, industrial sans with softened geometry—prioritizing strong silhouette, compact counters, and a crisp, engineered aesthetic that reads confidently in display and identity work.
Several forms lean toward squared counters and inset openings, giving some letters a slightly modular, almost stencil-adjacent impression. The lowercase shares the same squared-round construction as the uppercase, helping maintain a consistent, logo-like texture in mixed-case settings.