Sans Superellipse Uhfu 6 is a bold, wide, low contrast, upright, normal x-height, monospaced font.
Keywords: ui labels, terminals, dashboards, signage, packaging, tech, utilitarian, industrial, retro, system feel, technical clarity, modular consistency, brand utility, square-round, rounded corners, blocky, modular, geometric.
A heavy, monolinear sans built from rounded-rectangle and superelliptic forms, producing broad counters and soft corners within a firmly modular framework. Strokes remain uniform with squared terminals that are subtly eased, and the overall width feels generous, giving letters a stable, planted silhouette. Curves on C, G, O, and S read more like controlled rounded boxes than circles, while diagonals (A, K, V, W, X, Y) are straight and crisp, reinforcing a constructed, grid-like rhythm. Figures are similarly boxy and open, with clear segmentation and consistent weight across the set.
Well-suited to UI labels, dashboards, and on-screen readouts where a compact, regular rhythm and sturdy shapes aid scanning. It also works effectively for packaging, wayfinding, and industrial-style branding that benefits from a robust, modular presence. In longer passages it creates a strong, even typographic color, making it best for short blocks, specs, and technical text rather than delicate editorial use.
The tone is functional and engineered, with a confident, machine-made regularity that suggests instrumentation, coding interfaces, and industrial labeling. Its rounded geometry keeps the voice friendly enough for contemporary tech branding, while the blocky construction adds a subtle retro digital flavor.
The design appears intended to deliver a sturdy, highly consistent typographic system with rounded-rect geometry, combining the clarity of a utilitarian sans with a distinctive, device-like personality. It prioritizes repeatable forms and even texture for dependable display and interface contexts.
The design emphasizes consistent spacing and repeatable shapes, creating a strong texture in paragraph-like settings. Apertures and counters remain relatively open for a heavy style, which helps prevent letters from clogging when set tightly or displayed at smaller sizes.