Sans Superellipse Degil 5 is a light, very wide, monoline, italic, normal x-height font.
Keywords: tech branding, ui headings, gaming titles, sci-fi posters, product logos, futuristic, technical, sleek, minimal, streamlining, modernization, sci-fi tone, interface feel, rounded, squared, geometric, aerodynamic, clean.
A wide, right-slanted sans with monoline strokes and a geometry built from rounded rectangles and soft corners. Curves are squarish and controlled rather than circular, with smooth, continuous joins and minimal contrast. Counters tend to be open and horizontally stretched, giving the letters a low, cruising silhouette; terminals are rounded and consistent, and several forms use simplified, single-storey constructions (notably the lowercase a and g). Figures echo the same rounded-rect framework, with open, linear shapes and generous horizontal spacing.
Best suited to short-to-medium display settings where its wide stance and rounded-rect geometry can read as intentional: tech and automotive branding, interface or dashboard-style headings, gaming and sci‑fi titling, and modern product logos. It can work in compact text only with ample spacing and larger sizes, where the open shapes and monoline construction remain clear.
The overall tone feels futuristic and engineered—clean, streamlined, and a bit retro-tech. Its extended width and softened corners suggest speed and modern interfaces rather than editorial warmth, creating a cool, composed voice suited to technology-forward branding.
The design appears intended to translate superelliptical, rounded-rectangle forms into a cohesive italic sans, prioritizing a streamlined, contemporary look. Its wide proportions and simplified constructions aim for a distinctive, technology-leaning personality that stays clean and consistent across letters and numerals.
The italic slant is steady and integrated into the construction, and the wide proportions create a distinctive rhythm with long horizontals and gentle curves. Some uppercase forms lean toward a stencil-like simplicity in their internal structure, reinforcing a utilitarian, display-oriented character.