Sans Superellipse Omkas 6 is a bold, narrow, monoline, upright, tall x-height font visually similar to 'Cream Opera' by Factory738 and 'Highriser' by Nicolas Deslé (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: headlines, posters, signage, packaging, branding, condensed, industrial, modern, functional, assertive, space saving, high impact, utilitarian clarity, modern branding, systemic consistency, rounded corners, compact, high contrast (mass), uniform strokes, tight fit.
A condensed sans with uniform stroke weight and a compact, vertically oriented build. Curves and counters are based on rounded-rectangle geometry, giving bowls and openings a squared-off softness rather than purely circular forms. The overall color is dark and even, with tight apertures and short arms that keep silhouettes efficient at narrow widths. Uppercase forms are tall and disciplined, while lowercase maintains a large x-height and simple, sturdy terminals for a clean, utilitarian rhythm.
Works best for short-to-medium setting where density and impact matter: headlines, posters, signage systems, packaging, and brand wordmarks that need to fit into tight horizontal space. It can also serve in UI labels or navigation where a compact, high-contrast (mass) sans helps maximize legibility at small widths, provided spacing is tuned appropriately.
The tone is direct and pragmatic, with an industrial, poster-ready presence. Its rounded-rectilinear construction adds a subtle retro-mechanical feel while staying firmly contemporary. The condensed stance reads as urgent and space-conscious, suited to messaging that needs to feel bold and straightforward.
The design appears intended to deliver strong, space-saving typography with a consistent, monoline structure and rounded-rectangle construction that keeps forms sturdy and recognizable. Its proportions prioritize economy and punch, aiming for a modern utilitarian voice with a distinctive superelliptical softness.
Round letters like O/C/Q read as superelliptical rather than circular, and many joins resolve with softened corners instead of sharp points. The numerals follow the same compact logic, keeping widths economical and maintaining consistent stroke endings for a cohesive, no-nonsense texture in text blocks.