Sans Superellipse Rylid 5 is a bold, normal width, high contrast, upright, normal x-height font visually similar to 'Protura' by MIX.Jpg (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: headlines, posters, signage, packaging, branding, industrial, retro, utilitarian, assertive, technical, impact, economy, durability, clarity, engineering, condensed feel, rounded corners, squared bowls, ink-trap feel, high-waisted.
A heavy, compact sans with a squared, superelliptical skeleton: bowls and counters are built from rounded rectangles rather than true circles, giving the forms a boxy-but-soft geometry. Strokes are generally straight and vertical with tight apertures, and several joins show small cut-ins that read like subtle ink-trap behavior, helping corners stay crisp at weight. The uppercase is tall and narrow with uniform cap height and minimal modulation, while the lowercase keeps a practical, workmanlike rhythm; counters remain relatively small, and terminals are mostly flat. Figures and punctuation follow the same squared-round logic, with sturdy, sign-like silhouettes and clear differentiation between forms (notably the distinctive, tailed Q and the compact, stacked shapes in 2/3/5).
Best suited to short-form display settings where a dense, impactful texture is desirable—headlines, posters, packaging panels, and branding marks that want an industrial edge. It also fits wayfinding or signage-style applications at larger sizes, where the squared-rounded construction reads cleanly and consistently.
The overall tone is industrial and no-nonsense, with a slightly retro engineered flavor reminiscent of labeling, stenciled equipment marks, or mid-century display typography. Its squared rounding and compact spacing project efficiency and toughness rather than warmth, making the voice feel assertive and technical.
The design appears intended to combine the efficiency of condensed, engineered letterforms with softened superelliptical curves for a distinctive, durable display voice. The small corner cut-ins suggest an effort to preserve clarity and structure at heavy weight while maintaining a compact, utilitarian rhythm.
In text, the dense color and narrow letterforms create strong horizontal bands, and the tight apertures can make word shapes feel compact and blocky. The distinctive superelliptical curves keep it from feeling purely mechanical, adding a controlled softness that maintains legibility while preserving a rigid, manufactured character.