Sans Superellipse Kyduv 5 is a regular weight, very wide, medium contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: branding, logotypes, posters, headlines, packaging, futuristic, tech, retro, tech flavor, geometric system, display impact, rounded, squared, modular, geometric, soft corners.
A wide, rounded-rectangle sans built from smooth superellipse curves and flat-ended horizontals. Strokes are largely monoline with gently softened corners and consistent radii, producing boxy counters and pill-like terminals. The proportions are expanded, with broad bowls and open apertures; curves meet stems with controlled, engineered joins that keep the overall texture even in text. Figures follow the same rounded, rectilinear logic, with clear, display-oriented shapes and a cohesive rhythm across uppercase, lowercase, and numerals.
Best suited to branding and logotype work where a wide, futuristic geometry can carry identity, and to posters, headlines, and packaging that benefit from bold silhouettes and smooth, rounded corners. It also fits UI/tech-themed graphics, title cards, and signage where a friendly but engineered voice is desired.
The overall tone feels modern and engineered, combining a friendly softness from the rounded corners with a crisp, technical discipline in its geometry. It reads as sci‑fi and digital without becoming overly sharp or aggressive, giving it a retro-future flavor reminiscent of industrial interfaces and 1970s–1990s tech aesthetics.
The design appears intended to translate superellipse and rounded-rectangle geometry into a clean sans that feels both approachable and technological. Its widened proportions and consistent corner rounding prioritize distinctive shapes and a strong display presence while keeping a controlled, uniform typographic color.
Distinctive construction shows in the squared bowls and counters (notably in round letters and numerals), and in the simplified, modular treatment of joins and diagonals. The widened stance and rounded rectangles create a strong silhouette at larger sizes, while the even stroke behavior helps maintain consistency in short text settings.