Sans Superellipse Utmed 13 is a bold, very wide, monoline, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: display, headlines, branding, logos, posters, futuristic, techy, space-age, industrial, playful, tech aesthetic, high impact, geometric cohesion, modern branding, rounded, soft corners, geometric, extended, square-round.
A geometric sans built from rounded-rectangle and superellipse shapes, with consistent monoline strokes and generously softened corners. The proportions are notably extended, giving letters a broad stance and open counters, while terminals tend to end in blunt, squared-off cuts rather than tapers. Curves are engineered and symmetrical, with oval/squircle bowls and smooth joins that keep the texture even at larger sizes. The overall rhythm feels modular, with a slightly mechanical sense of construction and clear separation between strokes and counters.
Best suited for display use where its wide proportions and rounded-rect geometry can be appreciated—headlines, posters, packaging, and brand marks in tech, gaming, or electronics contexts. It also works well for UI-style titling, signage, and motion graphics where a clean, futuristic voice is desired.
The font conveys a clean, futuristic tone—more “interface” and sci‑fi than editorial. Its rounded squareness reads friendly and approachable, but the wide stance and engineered geometry keep it firmly in a tech-forward, industrial register. The result is confident and modern, with a slightly game/UI flavor.
The design intent appears to be a contemporary, techno-geometric sans that prioritizes a cohesive superellipse construction and a smooth, high-impact silhouette. It aims to deliver a distinctive “rounded-square” aesthetic that stays readable while signaling modernity and engineered precision.
Diagonal-driven forms like K, V, W, X, and Y emphasize crisp angles against the otherwise rounded system, adding energy without breaking consistency. Numerals follow the same squircle logic, with 8 and 0 reading especially as rounded rectangles, while 1 is a simple vertical stroke for clarity. The lowercase set appears designed for legibility in short bursts, with compact, simplified constructions that maintain the font’s modular feel.