Sans Superellipse Kumy 1 is a very bold, very wide, monoline, upright, tall x-height font.
Keywords: logotypes, headlines, posters, game ui, esports branding, futuristic, techno, industrial, sporty, gaming, high impact, tech styling, modular geometry, display focus, geometric, squared, rounded, compact, stencil-like.
This typeface is built from rounded-rectangle forms with large corner radii and consistent heavy strokes. Counters are tight and often appear as horizontal slits or squared openings, giving many letters a constructed, cut-out feel. Terminals are blunt and engineered, with frequent 45° chamfers in diagonals and joins (notably in K, R, W, X, Y, and Z). Overall spacing and internal apertures create a dense, high-impact texture that holds its shape well at large sizes.
Best suited for display typography where impact and a futuristic tone are desired: logotypes, product marks, posters, packaging callouts, and entertainment branding. It can also work in game/UI headings and short labels where a compact, engineered aesthetic is beneficial, though the tight apertures make long text less comfortable at small sizes.
The voice is assertive and synthetic, with a strong sci‑fi and motorsport flavor. Its compact counters and squared curves suggest machinery, interfaces, and industrial design rather than handwriting or editorial warmth. The look reads as confident and performance-oriented, suited to bold statements and display-led branding.
The design appears intended to deliver a bold, modern sans built from superelliptic modules, emphasizing a strong silhouette and a techno-industrial attitude. By keeping strokes uniform and shaping many counters into narrow slots, it prioritizes visual punch and a distinctive, system-like identity for branding and titles.
Uppercase and lowercase share the same squared, modular construction, with the lowercase retaining a simplified, geometric skeleton and minimal contrast from the caps. Numerals follow the same rounded-rect geometry, keeping a consistent rhythm for technical or scoreboard-like settings. The punctuation shown (period, colon, apostrophe, ampersand, question mark, exclamation) matches the heavy, blocky language and remains highly visible.