Sans Superellipse Kuwo 6 is a regular weight, wide, monoline, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: ui labels, signage, branding, packaging, headlines, futuristic, techy, clean, friendly, modular, modernization, system design, digital feel, geometric clarity, approachability, rounded, squared, geometric, soft, precise.
A rounded, squared-off sans with monoline strokes and superellipse-style curves that read like softened rectangles. Corners are consistently radiused, terminals are blunt and smooth, and bowls/counters tend toward rounded-rectangle shapes rather than true circles. Proportions run on the wide side with generous spacing and stable, even rhythm; joins are clean and uniform, giving the letterforms a constructed, engineered feel. Numerals and uppercase share the same softened geometry, with distinctive squared counters (notably in O/0) and a tidy, controlled baseline presence.
Well suited to UI and product contexts where a clean, geometric voice is desired—navigation, controls, dashboards, and hardware/software branding. Its wide stance and rounded-square construction also make it effective for headlines, logos, and packaging systems that aim for a modern, technical, yet friendly impression. In longer text, it performs best when set with comfortable leading to maintain the airy rhythm of its wide proportions.
The overall tone is contemporary and tech-forward, balancing a futuristic, interface-like precision with approachable softness from the rounded corners. It feels orderly and modern, with a mildly retro-digital flavor that suggests systems, devices, and designed environments rather than editorial warmth.
The design appears intended to translate a superellipse-based, rounded-rectangle construction into a practical sans for contemporary applications. It prioritizes consistency of corner radius and stroke weight to create a cohesive, system-like family of shapes that reads clearly while projecting a modern, device-oriented character.
The design language is highly consistent across cases: lowercase echoes the same rounded-rect geometry and keeps shapes open and legible, while uppercase maintains a compact, modular silhouette. The font’s signature is the repeated use of rounded-square bowls and clipped-looking apertures, which helps it feel cohesive in both short labels and longer lines of text.