Sans Superellipse Kuhy 10 is a bold, very wide, monoline, upright, normal x-height, monospaced font.
Keywords: headlines, logos, display, posters, packaging, futuristic, tech, industrial, arcade, sci-fi, tech aesthetic, strong silhouette, modular system, brand impact, rounded, squared, soft corners, geometric, modular.
A heavy, geometric sans built from rounded-rectangle strokes and soft-cornered terminals. Letterforms are very wide with a consistent, monoline-like stroke and generous interior cutouts that read as rectangular counters and slots. Curves are simplified into superellipse-style bends, creating a modular, engineered rhythm across caps, lowercase, and figures. The overall texture is strongly horizontal, with broad bowls, squared-off shoulders, and uniform spacing that reinforces an orderly grid-like appearance.
Best suited to display settings where its wide, modular forms can breathe—headlines, branding marks, posters, game or entertainment graphics, and tech-themed packaging. It can also work for short UI labels or signage-style titling when legibility is supported by adequate size and spacing.
The design projects a futuristic, tech-forward tone with an arcade and industrial flavor. Its rounded-square geometry feels digital and engineered rather than handwritten or editorial, giving text a clean, synthetic presence that suits sci-fi and interface aesthetics.
The font appears intended as a contemporary, geometric display face that translates rounded-rectangle construction into an alphabet with a consistent, system-like feel. It prioritizes strong silhouettes and a cohesive techno vocabulary over conventional text nuances, aiming for instant recognition in modern, digital-forward contexts.
Distinctive slot counters (notably in letters like E and similar forms) and squared bowls contribute to a high-contrast silhouette between filled strokes and open voids. Diagonals are kept stout and simplified, and joins are rounded to avoid sharp corners, maintaining a cohesive, soft-mechanical voice. At smaller sizes the narrow apertures and internal slots may visually merge, so it tends to read best when given space.