Sans Superellipse Uhka 5 is a very bold, wide, medium contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: logos, headlines, posters, sports branding, packaging, industrial, sporty, retro-tech, assertive, mechanical, impact, branding, signage, technical feel, distinct silhouettes, squared, rounded corners, blocky, stencil-like, ink-trap cuts.
A heavy, block-built sans with wide, squarish proportions and strongly rounded outer corners. Strokes are largely uniform, with counters and bowls shaped like softened rectangles rather than true circles. Many joins and terminals show angular cut-ins and small notch-like breaks that read as functional detailing, giving letters a segmented, slightly stencil-like construction. The rhythm is compact and steady, with low-contrast geometry, generous interior apertures for the weight, and a consistent rounded-rectangle logic across uppercase, lowercase, and figures.
Best suited for logo marks, headlines, and short bursts of copy where strong silhouette and impact matter. It works well for sports and esports identities, tech or hardware branding, packaging, and signage where the chunky forms and engineered notches can carry a graphic voice. For longer text, it will read most comfortably at larger sizes due to its dense weight and stylized cut-ins.
The overall tone is tough and utilitarian, with a sporty, engineered feel. The rounded-rectangle geometry adds a friendly softness, but the notched cuts and dense mass keep it confident and bold, evoking athletic branding, arcade/tech signage, and industrial labeling.
The design appears aimed at delivering maximum presence through wide, rounded-rectangular forms while adding technical character via notch-like cuts and segmented joins. Those details create a distinctive, industrial display voice without leaving the realm of a clean, sans construction.
Uppercase forms feel more monoline and modular, while the lowercase introduces sturdier stems with simple, squared bowls; this creates a clear hierarchy between display caps and supporting text. Numerals follow the same softened-rectangular construction and maintain strong legibility at large sizes, with distinctive segmentation that helps characters separate in bold settings.