Sans Rounded Gehy 5 is a bold, normal width, monoline, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, logotypes, posters, ui display, game titles, futuristic, tech, playful, modular, sci-fi, tech branding, interface feel, display impact, sci-fi styling, logo character, rounded, geometric, squared, soft-cornered, stencil-like.
A geometric, rounded-corner sans with monoline strokes and squared, softly radiused counters. Letterforms lean on modular construction: many curves are implied through chamfered corners, and several glyphs use small gaps or notches that create a subtle stencil-like feel. The lowercase is compact and highly simplified, with single-storey forms and short, controlled extenders; dots are round and punctuation-like details are minimized. Numerals follow the same squared, rounded logic with mostly rectangular bowls and consistent stroke rhythm.
Best suited to headlines, brand marks, packaging, posters, and screen-forward design where its modular shapes can read as intentional styling. It also works well for game titles, tech/event branding, and interface-style display text, especially at medium to large sizes where the notches and rounded corners remain clear.
The overall tone is futuristic and device-like, with a playful edge from the softened corners and quirky, engineered cut-ins. It evokes sci‑fi interfaces, arcade-era tech, and modular signage, feeling both friendly and synthetic rather than severe.
The design appears intended to deliver a contemporary techno voice through a consistent grid-like construction and rounded terminals, balancing a hard, engineered structure with approachable softness. Its distinctive cut-ins and simplified forms suggest an emphasis on personality and recognizability over neutral text setting.
Distinctive details include occasional internal splits and terminal cutouts that add texture in display settings but can become visually busy at very small sizes. Curves are often rendered as stepped or squared arcs, reinforcing a digital, constructed aesthetic across both uppercase and lowercase.