Sans Superellipse Usho 3 is a bold, wide, medium contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, logotypes, posters, signage, ui display, tech, futuristic, industrial, confident, sporty, impact, modernity, legibility, branding, systemic feel, squared-round, geometric, chunky, rounded corners, compact counters.
A heavy, geometric sans built from squared-round (superellipse) forms with generously rounded corners and mostly flat terminals. Strokes are broad and consistent, with compact interior counters that stay open through careful rounding and generous apertures. Curves tend to resolve into softened rectangles rather than true circles, giving letters like O, C, and G a boxy, controlled silhouette. The rhythm is steady and sturdy, with broad proportions, firm horizontals, and a slightly engineered feel in diagonals and joins.
Best suited to headlines, branding, and other large-size applications where its chunky geometry and softened corners can carry visual identity. It also works well for signage and interface display text, especially in short labels, buttons, or dashboards where a sturdy, technical tone is desirable. For extended reading, it will be more effective in larger sizes or limited passages rather than dense body copy.
The overall tone is modern and assertive, reading as technical and forward-leaning without becoming playful. Its rounded-rect geometry suggests digital hardware, UI panels, and industrial labeling, while the weight and width project confidence and impact. The result feels sporty and contemporary, suited to bold messaging and clean, engineered aesthetics.
The design appears intended to deliver a bold, contemporary voice through superellipse-based construction—combining industrial strength with rounded friendliness. Its proportions and corner treatment prioritize immediate recognition, a consistent texture, and a distinctly modern, system-like character.
Distinctive squared bowls and rounded corners create strong recognition at a distance and keep edges from feeling harsh. Numerals share the same softened-rectangle logic, producing a cohesive, display-oriented set that remains legible in short strings. The lowercase maintains the same structural language as the caps, keeping texture uniform in mixed-case settings.