Sans Superellipse Ussi 6 is a bold, wide, medium contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, branding, logotypes, ui labels, posters, techy, modern, industrial, confident, clean, geometric system, tech aesthetic, modern branding, clarity, squarish, rounded, geometric, boxy, compact.
A geometric sans with a pronounced squarish skeleton and generously rounded corners, giving curves a superelliptical, rounded-rectangle feel. Strokes are largely uniform with crisp terminals and minimal modulation, producing a steady, engineered texture. Counters tend to be rectangular-oval and fairly open, while joins and diagonals stay clean and controlled, keeping letterforms compact and sturdy. Figures share the same squared-round construction, with straight-sided bowls and consistent corner radii that reinforce a cohesive system across letters and numerals.
This font is well-suited for headlines and short-to-medium display text where its squared-round geometry can be a defining visual cue. It can work effectively for branding and logotypes that want a contemporary, tech-forward tone, and it also fits interface labels, dashboards, and packaging where clarity and a controlled, industrial rhythm are desirable.
The overall tone reads modern and utilitarian, with a distinctly technological flavor. Its rounded-square geometry feels both friendly and machine-made, balancing approachability with a firm, assertive voice suitable for contemporary digital contexts.
The design appears intended to translate rounded-rectangle geometry into a practical sans for modern communication, prioritizing consistency, firmness, and a distinctive superelliptical character. It aims to deliver a contemporary, digital-native look that stays readable while maintaining a strong, recognizable silhouette.
The design’s visual identity is driven by consistent corner rounding and flattened curves, which creates a strong rhythm in all-round glyphs like C, G, O, Q, and the numerals. The lowercase shows simple, functional construction and maintains the same geometric logic as the capitals, helping mixed-case settings feel unified.