Sans Superellipse Kydum 3 is a regular weight, very wide, high contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, branding, logos, ui labels, posters, futuristic, tech, industrial, mechanical, retro sci‑fi, tech voice, modular geometry, display impact, mechanical clarity, signage clarity, squared-round, rounded corners, monolinear feel, ink-trap hints, modular.
A wide, squared-round sans with geometry built from rounded rectangles and superellipse-like curves. Strokes stay clean and mostly uniform, with crisp terminals and frequent radius corners that keep counters boxy rather than circular. Many joins show subtle notch-like cut-ins that read as practical ink-trap detailing, giving interior corners extra definition. Overall proportions are broad and stable, producing a dense horizontal rhythm with clear, open counters in letters like O, D, and e.
Best suited for short to medium text at display sizes where the wide stance and squared-round counters can read clearly. It works well for product branding, tech or industrial identities, interface labels, packaging, and poster titling where a modern, engineered voice is desired. In long passages, its broad width and tight geometry may be more effective for callouts and headings than continuous reading.
The overall tone is engineered and forward-looking, with a controlled, instrument-panel feel. Its rounded-square construction and clipped details evoke retro-futuristic hardware labeling and contemporary tech interfaces at the same time. The result feels precise, utilitarian, and slightly stylized without becoming playful.
The design appears intended to deliver a cohesive, modular, rounded-rect aesthetic that feels technical and manufactured, while maintaining legibility through open counters and consistent corner radii. The small corner cut-ins suggest an aim to keep joins crisp and readable in dense shapes, reinforcing a functional, industrial character.
Distinctive forms include a squared U and O family, a compact, angular S, and a single-storey a with a flat-topped, rounded-rect counter. The numerals follow the same rounded-square logic, keeping curves tight and corners consistent for a cohesive alphanumeric set.