Sans Superellipse Wuka 10 is a very bold, very wide, high contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, logos, packaging, sports branding, futuristic, industrial, techno, playful, assertive, impact, modernity, tech aesthetic, logo-ready, display clarity, rounded, squared, geometric, blocky, compact counters.
A heavy, geometric sans with squared-off rounds that read as superellipse/rounded-rectangle forms. Strokes are thick and confident with tight, compact counters, and terminals tend to finish with blunt cuts or softly radiused corners rather than sharp points. The overall width is generous and the shapes lean on simple, modular construction—noticeably in the boxy bowls, the squared curves, and the consistent corner radii across letters and figures. Curves and joins are simplified, producing a sturdy, poster-like texture with clear silhouette emphasis at large sizes.
Best suited for display applications where strong silhouettes and a compact, blocky texture are an advantage—headlines, posters, event graphics, branding marks, packaging, and bold UI callouts. It also fits themes like technology, gaming, sports, and futuristic editorial treatments where geometric, rounded-square forms reinforce the concept.
The tone is bold and contemporary with a distinctly techno, arcade, or sci‑fi flavor. Its rounded-square geometry feels friendly but forceful, balancing playful softness at the corners with an industrial, engineered structure. The result is attention-grabbing and graphic, suited to loud, modern messaging rather than subtle typography.
The design appears intended to deliver maximum impact through simplified, modular geometry and rounded-square curvature, creating a cohesive techno display voice. By prioritizing bold forms, consistent corner radii, and compact counters, it aims for instant recognizability and a strong graphic footprint in large-scale typography.
Straight horizontals and verticals dominate, while curved letters resolve into squarish arcs that keep the rhythm uniform across the alphabet. Numerals match the same rounded-rect construction, giving digit strings a cohesive, display-forward presence. At smaller sizes the tight counters and heavy strokes may reduce interior clarity, but at headline scales the shapes read strongly and consistently.