Sans Superellipse Untu 10 is a very bold, very wide, monoline, upright, tall x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, logos, packaging, sports branding, tech, futuristic, industrial, confident, playful, impact, modernity, branding, clarity, utility, rounded, squared, blocky, geometric, soft corners.
A heavy, geometric sans built from rounded-rectangle and superellipse-like forms. Strokes are consistently thick with minimal contrast, producing a solid, even color in display sizes. Counters are compact and often rectangular with rounded corners, while terminals are blunt and clean. The overall construction leans wide and sturdy, with a high x-height, short ascenders/descenders, and slightly squared curves that keep bowls and rounds tight and controlled.
Best suited for headlines, short statements, logos, and identity systems where a bold geometric voice is desired. It can work well on packaging, product marks, esports or sports-style branding, and UI/tech marketing where strong silhouette and high impact are priorities. In longer text blocks it will be most effective at larger sizes or with generous spacing to keep counters from visually closing in.
The font reads as modern and engineered, with a bold, assertive presence and a friendly softness from its rounded corners. Its wide stance and compact apertures give it a confident, slightly sci‑fi tone that feels at home in tech and product-forward branding. The shapes also add a game-like, playful edge, especially in the numerals and tightly enclosed letters.
The design appears intended to deliver maximum visual impact through compact counters, squared-rounded geometry, and a steady stroke weight. Its construction emphasizes strong silhouettes, consistent rhythm, and a distinctly modern, manufactured feel that remains approachable due to softened corners.
Round letters like O and Q feel more like rounded boxes than circles, and the Q’s tail is integrated as a geometric cut/extension. The S and 2 feature strong horizontal emphasis and tight interior shaping, reinforcing the chunky, modular rhythm. Numerals are built for impact, with simplified forms and large black areas that favor clarity at larger sizes over delicate detail.