Sans Superellipse Wuke 15 is a very bold, very wide, high contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: posters, logotypes, headlines, packaging, game ui, retro, industrial, techno, playful, punchy, impact, branding, retro-tech, modular styling, legibility at display, rounded, blocky, squarish, geometric, soft corners.
A heavy, geometric sans built from squarish, superellipse-like forms with generously rounded corners and large, dark counters. Strokes are predominantly monoline in feel, with occasional optical cut-ins and ink-trap-like notches at joins that sharpen the rhythm and keep apertures open. The overall footprint is expansive, with broad bowls and wide horizontals, while terminals remain blunt and clean. Curves tend to resolve into rounded rectangles rather than true circles, giving letters a compact, modular silhouette and a consistent, engineered texture across the alphabet and numerals.
Best suited to large-scale display applications where its chunky geometry and rounded-square construction can be appreciated—such as posters, branding wordmarks, product packaging, sports or event headlines, and entertainment or game UI titling. It can also work for short subheads or callouts, but the dense texture may feel overpowering in long-form text.
The tone is bold and assertive with a retro-futurist, industrial flavor—friendly because of the rounded geometry, but also mechanical and punchy due to its dense weight and squared structure. It reads as confident, game-like, and slightly sci‑fi, lending a distinctive voice that feels designed for impact rather than subtlety.
The design appears intended to deliver maximum visual presence with a cohesive rounded-rectangular motif, balancing friendliness (soft corners and large counters) with a technical, modular edge (squared proportions and strategic cut-ins). It emphasizes a strong, recognizable silhouette for contemporary branding and retro-tech inspired display typography.
Distinctive cutaway details appear on several glyphs (notably around joins and some horizontals), creating a characteristic "carved" look that improves separation at display sizes. The numerals match the letterforms’ rounded-rectangle construction, maintaining the same chunky, modular rhythm in mixed alphanumeric settings.