Sans Superellipse Rymof 5 is a bold, normal width, medium contrast, upright, tall x-height font.
Keywords: ui, signage, branding, headlines, posters, tech, futuristic, industrial, geometric, clean, modernize, system use, geometric clarity, tech tone, brand voice, rounded, square, compact, modular, monoline.
A geometric sans built from rounded-rectangle geometry, with corners consistently softened into superellipse-like curves and largely monolinear strokes. Curves resolve into squared bowls and counters, giving letters a compact, modular silhouette; terminals are clean and mostly flat, with occasional clipped joins where strokes meet. Proportions emphasize a tall x-height and relatively short ascenders/descenders, producing dense, efficient word shapes. The figures and uppercase share the same squared-round construction, creating an even, engineered rhythm across text.
Well suited to user interfaces, dashboards, and wayfinding where sturdy shapes and clear construction help maintain clarity. It also works effectively for branding, packaging, and headline or poster typography when a modern, tech-forward impression is desired, and can handle short-to-medium text blocks where a compact, uniform texture is beneficial.
The overall tone feels contemporary and technical, with a sleek, machined character that reads as futuristic without becoming decorative. Its rounded corners keep it approachable, while the squared forms and tight apertures add an industrial, system-like seriousness.
Likely designed to deliver a contemporary geometric voice rooted in rounded-rectangular forms, balancing a friendly softness at the corners with a precise, engineered structure. The consistent construction across letters and numerals suggests an intention for cohesive system use in modern digital and environmental applications.
The design leans on straight segments and rounded corners more than true circular curves, so round letters read as squarish and controlled. Spacing appears steady and purposeful, supporting a consistent texture in lines of text; the numerals echo the same construction for a unified voice in interfaces and data-heavy settings.