Sans Superellipse Lorol 5 is a regular weight, very narrow, monoline, upright, short x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, ui labels, branding, signage, techy, futuristic, modular, minimal, retro sci-fi, space-saving, tech aesthetic, systematic, display clarity, modular geometry, rounded-rect, geometric, condensed, tall, crisp.
A tall, condensed sans built from monoline strokes with rounded-rectangle geometry throughout. Curves are largely translated into softened corners and superelliptical bowls, producing squared counters and a clean, modular rhythm. Terminals are consistently rounded, joins are simple, and the overall drawing favors straight verticals and compact horizontals, giving the face a tight, engineered texture in text.
Best suited for headlines, short blocks of text, and interface or product labeling where a compact, technical tone is desired. It can work well for logos and packaging that benefit from a narrow footprint and a geometric, rounded-rect aesthetic, and it is especially effective in sci‑fi, technology, and industrial-themed graphics.
The design reads as technical and futuristic, with a subtle retro-digital flavor. Its narrow, tubular construction and squared curves evoke interfaces, labeling, and sci‑fi titling while staying calm and systematic rather than expressive or calligraphic.
The font appears designed to deliver a compact, space-saving sans with a consistent monoline structure and a distinctive rounded-rectangle skeleton. The intention seems to be clarity and repeatable geometry, creating a recognizable techno voice while remaining orderly and legible in display contexts.
Glyphs lean toward simplified, schematic forms—particularly in rounded letters and numerals—where counters appear boxy and corners carry most of the curvature. The narrow proportions and uniform stroke make spacing and rhythm feel precise, while the distinctive squared bowls add a recognizable voice at display sizes.