Sans Superellipse Kybuy 1 is a very bold, very wide, medium contrast, upright, normal x-height font visually similar to 'Avionic' by Grype (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: headlines, logos, posters, sports branding, gaming ui, futuristic, industrial, tech, sporty, assertive, impact, modernity, tech flavor, branding, squared, rounded corners, blocky, extended, modular.
This typeface is built from compact, squared forms with generously rounded corners, giving many letters a rounded-rectangle (superellipse) footprint. Strokes are heavy and largely uniform, with tight apertures and rectangular counters that emphasize a solid, engineered feel. Terminals are blunt and clean, and diagonals are sharply cut, creating crisp joins in letters like K, V, W, and X. Proportions are horizontally extended with wide caps and broad lowercase, and spacing appears sturdy rather than airy, maintaining a dense, high-impact texture in words and lines.
Best suited to large-size applications where its blocky details and tight apertures can read clearly: headlines, brand marks, packaging callouts, posters, and bold signage. It can also work well in UI or interface-style treatments when a strong, technical aesthetic is desired, especially for short labels rather than long-form text.
The overall tone is modern and machine-like, with a confident, high-performance attitude. Its squared geometry and compressed openings read as purposeful and technical, evoking sci‑fi interfaces, industrial labeling, and sport or esports branding. The heavy silhouettes feel forceful and attention-grabbing rather than friendly or delicate.
The design appears intended to deliver maximum visual impact through a geometric, rounded-rectangle construction and a dense, extended rhythm. It prioritizes a contemporary, engineered look that stays consistent across caps, lowercase, and numerals for cohesive display typography.
Round letters such as O and Q lean toward rounded rectangles rather than true circles, and many counters are similarly boxy, reinforcing the modular construction. The lowercase retains the same geometric logic as the caps, producing a consistent voice across cases, while the numerals share the same wide, squared styling for cohesive display settings.