Sans Superellipse Veray 1 is a regular weight, very wide, monoline, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: ui labels, app design, tech branding, headlines, wayfinding, futuristic, techy, sleek, geometric, minimal, modernize, systematize, futurism, ui clarity, tech tone, rounded, squared, modular, open, clean.
A wide, monoline sans built from rounded-rectangle (superellipse) geometry with consistently softened corners and smooth, even stroke weight. Curves tend to resolve into flat terminals and squared counters, giving letters like C, O, and D a capsule-like silhouette rather than a true circle. Spacing is generous and the overall set feels horizontally expanded, with simple, engineered joins and minimal contrast. Lowercase forms are similarly constructed with rounded bowls and short, simplified terminals; digits and punctuation match the same rounded-rectilinear logic.
This font is well suited to interface typography, product branding, and technology-oriented titles where a clean, futuristic aesthetic is desired. Its wide proportions and monoline construction make it particularly effective in short headlines, display settings, and signage/wayfinding where a bold, modern silhouette helps differentiate forms.
The overall tone is contemporary and machine-like, with a calm, controlled rhythm that reads as futuristic and interface-driven. Its rounded corners keep the voice friendly, but the squared geometry and wide stance emphasize a technical, sci‑fi sensibility.
The design appears intended to translate rounded-rectangle industrial forms into a coherent alphabet for modern screen and product contexts. It prioritizes a consistent geometric system—soft corners, squared counters, and wide set—to achieve a sleek, futuristic look while staying approachable.
Several shapes lean toward rectangular counters and open apertures, which reinforces a modular, UI-oriented feel. The design maintains strong stylistic consistency across uppercase, lowercase, and numerals, with distinctive squared-round forms in characters like O/Q and the curved letters that behave more like softened boxes than circles.