Sans Superellipse Loruk 5 is a light, normal width, monoline, upright, normal x-height, monospaced font.
Keywords: ui labels, dashboards, coding, data tables, technical signage, techno, utilitarian, retro, clean, modular, grid alignment, system clarity, tech aesthetic, functional display, rounded corners, squared forms, geometric, boxy, low contrast.
A geometric, box-driven sans built from rounded-rectangle forms and consistent stroke weight. Curves resolve into softened corners rather than true circles, giving counters a squarish, superelliptical feel. Terminals are blunt and uniform, joins are crisp, and diagonals (as in V/W/X/Y) stay disciplined and straight. The overall rhythm is orderly and engineered, with compact shapes, clear interior counters, and a slightly mechanical construction that stays consistent from capitals through lowercase and numerals.
Well-suited to interfaces and information-dense settings where even spacing and consistent glyph width support alignment, such as UI labels, dashboards, tables, terminal-like displays, and technical wayfinding. It can also work as a display accent for branding that wants a measured, engineered voice.
The tone is technical and no-nonsense, with a retro-digital flavor reminiscent of instrument panels and early computer display lettering. Its modular geometry and softened corners keep it approachable while still feeling precise and systematic.
The design appears intended to deliver a highly regular, grid-friendly texture with a modern-industrial character. By building letters from rounded rectangular primitives and keeping stroke behavior uniform, it prioritizes consistency, clarity, and a distinctive techno-geometric signature.
Distinctive rectangular bowls and counters make letters like B, D, O, P, and R read as rounded boxes. Numerals follow the same logic, with squared-off curves and simplified geometry that favors consistency over calligraphic nuance.