Sans Superellipse Lihy 6 is a bold, wide, monoline, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: display, headlines, branding, logos, ui labels, futuristic, tech, digital, modular, industrial, sci-fi ui, system identity, tech branding, display impact, modular design, rounded corners, squared forms, stencil-like, geometric, high contrast spacing.
A geometric sans built from squared, rounded-rectangle forms with consistently rounded corners and a uniform stroke. Curves are largely replaced by softened right angles, producing boxy counters in letters like O, D, and Q, while diagonals appear selectively in shapes such as V, W, X, and parts of K and R. The joins and terminals are smooth and blunt, and many glyphs use open apertures and segmented strokes that create a slightly stencil-like, modular construction. Proportions skew horizontally generous, with compact internal counters and a steady, even rhythm across uppercase, lowercase, and numerals.
Best suited to short-to-medium display settings such as headlines, product branding, posters, and game/tech packaging where the geometric construction can be a central visual motif. It can also work for interface labels and dashboards when a futuristic, device-like voice is desired, especially at sizes large enough to preserve its internal openings and segmented details.
The overall tone reads as modern and engineered, with a distinctly sci‑fi and interface-oriented feel. Its rounded-square geometry and segmented construction suggest electronic displays, hardware labeling, and futuristic branding rather than traditional editorial typography.
The design appears intended to translate rounded-rectangle geometry into a cohesive alphabet for contemporary, technology-forward communication. By prioritizing uniform stroke, softened corners, and modular structure, it aims for strong recognizability and a consistent, systemized texture across mixed-case text and numerals.
Distinctive, easily identifiable silhouettes come from the rounded-square “o/0”-like shapes and the simplified, angular treatment of diagonals. The lowercase set echoes the uppercase structure closely, reinforcing a cohesive, system-like personality that remains consistent across alphanumerics.