Sans Superellipse Beron 5 is a very light, very narrow, low contrast, italic, tall x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, branding, ui labels, wayfinding, technical, futuristic, minimal, precise, austere, space saving, tech identity, geometric system, clean labeling, monoline, condensed, oblique, rounded corners, angular rounds.
A monoline, condensed oblique sans with tall proportions and a tight, vertical rhythm. Letterforms are constructed from straight strokes and rounded-rectangle curves, with corners softened into clipped/rounded joins that read as superelliptic rather than circular. Curved characters like C, G, O, and Q feel squarish and engineered, while diagonals (A, K, V, W, X, Y) are sharp and clean, reinforcing a technical, geometric skeleton. Counters are narrow and open, terminals are crisp, and spacing is compact, giving the face a brisk, upright texture despite the slant.
Best suited to display settings where a tall, compact, technical voice is desirable—headlines, posters, logotypes, product markings, and interface/overlay labels. It can also work for short navigational text or wayfinding-style applications where a condensed footprint and consistent geometric forms are priorities.
The overall tone is sleek and utilitarian, suggesting instrumentation, sci‑fi interfaces, and engineered signage. Its narrow build and precise geometry convey efficiency and control more than warmth, with a subtle retro-tech flavor from the rounded-rectangle construction.
The design appears intended to deliver a space-efficient, futuristic sans built from rounded-rectangle geometry, balancing mechanical precision with softened corners for legibility and a distinctive silhouette. Its consistent monoline construction and compact rhythm suggest an emphasis on clarity in tight layouts and a strong, tech-forward identity.
Uppercase and lowercase share a consistent, streamlined construction, and the numerals mirror the same rounded-corner, straight-stroke logic for a cohesive alphanumeric set. The oblique angle is steady and the stroke endings stay clean, which helps maintain a uniform, schematic look across longer lines of text.