Sans Superellipse Umha 7 is a very bold, wide, monoline, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, logos, posters, gaming ui, sports branding, futuristic, techno, space-age, sporty, industrial, sci-fi branding, strong impact, modular geometry, friendly tech, rounded, squared-off, geometric, smooth, chunky.
A heavy, geometric display sans built from rounded-rectangle forms and smooth superelliptical curves. Strokes read largely uniform, with generous corner radii and frequent squared terminals that keep the silhouette crisp despite the softness. Counters are compact and often rectangular or pill-shaped, and several joins use clean cut-ins that create a modular, engineered feel. The overall rhythm is wide and steady, with low contrast, stable verticals, and a consistently “machined” curve logic across letters and figures.
Best suited to display typography such as headlines, posters, packaging callouts, and branding—especially for technology, gaming, automotive, and sports aesthetics. It can work well for UI titles or interface labels in larger sizes where the compact counters and bold forms remain clearly legible. For long-form text, it’s most effective as an accent face rather than a primary reading font.
The tone is decidedly futuristic and technical, echoing sci‑fi interfaces, arcade hardware, and motorsport branding. Its rounded geometry feels friendly rather than aggressive, but the mass and tight apertures add a controlled, industrial confidence. The result is playful-tech: modern, synthetic, and designed to look at home in digital or engineered contexts.
This font appears designed to deliver a cohesive, modern “rounded tech” voice: a compact, modular construction with softened corners that keeps the forms approachable while still reading as engineered and forward-looking. The consistent superelliptical geometry suggests an intention to create strong silhouettes and memorable letterforms for impactful display use.
The design leans on distinctive corner treatments and inset joins (notably in shapes like S, G, and 2/3), which makes it highly characterful at display sizes. The numerals follow the same rounded-rect construction, and the sample text suggests strong presence in short phrases, headlines, and logotype-style settings where the chunky forms can breathe.