Sans Superellipse Rumav 3 is a regular weight, normal width, medium contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: ui text, product design, wayfinding, editorial, branding, modern, technical, clean, systematic, neutral, clarity, neutrality, modernization, system cohesion, friendliness, rounded corners, squared bowls, geometric, open apertures, monoline.
A geometric sans with a pronounced superellipse construction: round forms are built from rounded-rectangle bowls with flattened sides and consistently softened corners. Strokes read largely monoline with measured, even modulation, and curves connect to straights with smooth, engineered transitions. Counters are generous and apertures stay open, giving letters a clear, airy rhythm. Terminals are mostly straight and crisp, while the overall silhouette keeps a slightly squared, contemporary feel rather than purely circular geometry.
Well-suited to UI and product environments where clarity and a contemporary geometric character are desired, including dashboards, app typography, and device or software branding. The open counters and steady rhythm also support short editorial passages, signage, and information design where legibility and neutrality are priorities.
The tone is modern and utilitarian, with a subtle tech flavor coming from the rounded-rect geometry and controlled spacing. It feels calm and objective, leaning toward interface and product typography rather than expressive or historical voices.
The design appears intended to merge geometric cleanliness with softened, human-friendly corners, producing a pragmatic sans that reads efficiently while still feeling contemporary and approachable. Its consistent superellipse vocabulary suggests a focus on coherence across letters and numerals for system-oriented branding and interface use.
Distinctive superelliptical bowls show up strongly in characters like C, G, O, Q, and 0, and the numerals share the same rounded-corner logic for a cohesive set. The design maintains consistent corner radii and curve tension across the alphabet, creating a uniform, system-like texture in paragraph settings.