Sans Superellipse Vadiz 6 is a bold, wide, low contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, logotypes, ui display, posters, gaming, futuristic, tech, geometric, industrial, sporty, tech branding, interface tone, impactful display, geometric system, rounded corners, square forms, extended, stencil cuts, modular.
A geometric sans built from rounded-rectangle geometry, with squared counters and generously rounded exterior corners. Strokes are heavy and even, with a slightly extended stance and compact, engineered spacing that creates a steady horizontal rhythm. Many glyphs incorporate deliberate triangular cut-ins and notched joints that introduce a subtle stencil-like segmentation without breaking overall solidity. Curves resolve into flat terminals and softened right angles, producing a clean, modular texture in both caps and lowercase, while numerals follow the same boxy, superelliptical construction.
Best suited to display roles where its geometric construction and notched detailing can read clearly—headlines, branding, packaging, esports or gaming titles, and interface labels. It can work for short blocks of text in larger sizes, but its stylized cuts and dense texture are most effective when used as a visual voice rather than for continuous reading.
The overall tone is contemporary and machine-made, leaning toward sci‑fi interfaces, motorsport graphics, and hardware branding. Its notches and squared curves add a tactical, engineered feel—confident, high-impact, and purpose-driven rather than friendly or calligraphic.
The font appears designed to translate rounded-rectangle geometry into a strong, contemporary sans for technology-leaning communication. The notched/stencil accents seem intended to add character and differentiation while keeping the overall system modular and consistent.
The design relies on repeated corner radii and consistent rectangular counters, which helps maintain uniform color across longer text lines. The angular cut details are most noticeable in letters with horizontal bars and diagonals, giving the face a distinctive “tech” signature that becomes part of the texture at display sizes.