Sans Superellipse Rylup 10 is a regular weight, normal width, high contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, branding, logos, packaging, techy, retro, industrial, modular, authoritative, geometric clarity, tech flavor, display impact, modular forms, signage feel, squared, rounded corners, crisp, condensed caps, blocky.
A geometric sans built from squared, superelliptical bowls and rounded-rectangle counters, with a strong vertical stance and crisp terminals. Strokes show noticeable contrast between dominant stems and thinner connecting strokes, especially visible in letters like E, F, T and in the numerals. Curves are tightly controlled and corners are consistently softened, giving round shapes (O, Q, 0) a compact, boxed feel. Proportions lean tall, with relatively narrow uppercase forms and straightforward, minimally modulated lowercase, producing a clean, engineered rhythm across words.
Best suited for display settings where its squared curves and contrast can be appreciated—headlines, posters, branding marks, product packaging, and bold interface or signage moments. It can also work for short passages such as pull quotes or navigation labels when a technical, constructed feel is desired.
The overall tone is modern and technical with a distinct retro-industrial edge. Its squared rounds and high-contrast construction evoke machinery, signage, and digital-era display aesthetics rather than a neutral text voice. The result feels confident and slightly futuristic, with a disciplined, modular personality.
The font appears designed to merge geometric clarity with a distinctive superelliptical, rounded-rectangle vocabulary, creating a contemporary sans that stands apart from neutral grotesks. Its consistent corner rounding and compact bowls suggest an intention to deliver a modular, engineered look that remains legible and strong in display typography.
The design emphasizes squareness in both bowls and joins, which creates strong silhouettes at larger sizes and a uniform, system-like texture. Numerals follow the same rounded-rectangle logic, giving figures a sturdy, display-oriented presence. The uppercase reads more monolithic while the lowercase adds a touch of utility and clarity, making mixed-case setting feel structured rather than friendly.