Sans Superellipse Uhsa 11 is a regular weight, very wide, monoline, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, branding, posters, game ui, tech packaging, techno, sci‑fi, futuristic, industrial, futuristic branding, ui display, geometric clarity, industrial feel, octagonal, chamfered, modular, geometric, angular.
A geometric sans built from straight strokes and rounded-rectangle counters, with frequent chamfered corners that create an octagonal silhouette. Strokes are consistently even, producing a clean monoline rhythm, while terminals often end in clipped angles rather than curves. Open apertures and squared bowls keep the forms crisp; the design relies on rectilinear geometry with occasional softened inner corners for legibility. Overall spacing feels generous and the wide set gives lines a strong horizontal presence, especially in caps and numerals.
Best suited to display contexts where its engineered geometry can be appreciated: headlines, logotypes, tech and gaming interfaces, product/packaging graphics, and futuristic or industrial-themed posters. It can work for short passages in UI or promotional copy when ample size and spacing are available, but it reads most confidently as a title and identity face.
The face conveys a distinctly technological, near-future tone—precise, engineered, and slightly mechanical. Its chamfered corners and rounded-rect geometry read as dashboard-like and synthetic, suggesting digital interfaces, robotics, and industrial branding rather than editorial warmth.
The design appears intended to blend rounded-rectangle construction with chamfered, “cut metal” details to achieve a modern, interface-friendly look. By keeping strokes uniform and shapes modular, it aims for consistency across caps, lowercase, and figures while projecting a futuristic, technical personality.
Distinctive cut corners show up across many letters and numerals, giving the font a consistent “machined” motif. The numerals are similarly geometric and squared-off, matching the caps in visual weight and presence. In text, the angular terminals and wide forms create a steady, gridlike texture that stays highly graphic at display sizes.