Sans Superellipse Yeny 5 is a very bold, very wide, medium contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, logos, packaging, sportswear, techy, assertive, playful, futuristic, sporty, high impact, brand voice, modernize, geometry, approachability, rounded, blocky, squarish, soft-cornered, compact.
A heavy, wide sans with rounded-rectangle (superellipse-like) construction and consistently softened corners. Curves read as squared-off bowls and counters rather than true circles, giving letters a chunky, engineered feel. Strokes are broadly even with subtle modulation at joins; terminals are mostly flat, with occasional angled cuts that add a streamlined, forward-leaning look without actually slanting. The spacing and proportions emphasize horizontal presence, and the lowercase shows single-storey shapes with compact counters and sturdy stems.
Best suited for large-scale display use where its broad footprint and rounded-block forms can project impact: headlines, posters, branding marks, product packaging, and sports or gaming-themed graphics. It can also work for short UI labels or title cards when a strong, friendly techno voice is desired, but the dense weight and tight apertures make it less ideal for long-form text at small sizes.
The overall tone is confident and energetic, blending a retro-futurist, arcade-like sturdiness with a friendly softness from the rounded corners. It feels bold and attention-seeking while staying approachable rather than aggressive, suggesting modern tech, sports branding, and playful display messaging.
The design appears intended to deliver maximum presence with a smooth, superelliptical geometry—combining sturdy, wide proportions with softened corners for a modern, industrial-yet-friendly display voice. The consistent rounded-rectangle vocabulary across letters and figures suggests an aim for cohesive, logo-ready forms and clear, high-impact word shapes.
Round letters (like O/Q) appear as squarish ovals with thick rims, and the numerals share the same rounded, block-built logic, keeping headings and UI-style readouts visually cohesive. Diagonal-heavy letters (K, V, W, X, Y) use broad, stable joins that maintain the font’s chunky rhythm, and the single-storey a and g reinforce an informal, contemporary character.