Sans Superellipse Ibluw 6 is a very bold, normal width, low contrast, upright, normal x-height font visually similar to 'Averta PE' and 'Averta Standard PE' by Intelligent Design, 'PF DIN Text' by Parachute, 'Akwe Pro' by ROHH, 'URW Form' by URW Type Foundry, and 'Klein' by Zetafonts (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: headlines, posters, packaging, branding, logos, friendly, retro, punchy, approachable, playful, high impact, approachability, brand presence, graphic simplicity, rounded, soft corners, compact, chunky, sturdy.
A heavy, rounded sans with a compact footprint and softened corners throughout. Curves are built from broad, superellipse-like bowls and rounded-rectangle counters, while straight strokes end in gentle, squared-off terminals rather than sharp cuts. The design leans on simple geometric construction with small apertures and generous stroke thickness, creating dense interior spaces in letters like a, e, s, and g. Uppercase forms are sturdy and blocky; lowercase maintains a consistent, no-nonsense rhythm with short extenders and minimal detailing, supporting strong color in text.
Best suited to display roles where strong presence and quick recognition matter: headlines, posters, branding lockups, and packaging. It can also work for short callouts or UI labels when ample size and spacing are available, though the tight apertures suggest avoiding very small text.
The overall tone is warm and assertive, pairing a friendly softness with a poster-like loudness. Its chunky geometry and rounded corners give it a slightly retro, sign-painting/packaging energy, while the tight counters add a bold, confident voice that feels more playful than formal.
The design appears intended to deliver maximum impact with a friendly, contemporary geometric voice—using rounded-rectangle construction and dense forms to create a distinctive, highly graphic texture that holds up in bold statements.
Figures are similarly robust and rounded, with simple, highly graphic silhouettes that read well at larger sizes. The lowercase ‘g’ appears single-storey, and the overall punctuation/diacritic styling (as seen in i/j dots and apostrophe) follows the same rounded, weighty logic, keeping the texture consistent across mixed-case settings.