Sans Superellipse Onmos 9 is a regular weight, wide, monoline, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: display, headlines, logotypes, posters, ui labels, tech, futuristic, industrial, gaming, space-age, futuristic branding, interface styling, industrial clarity, systematic geometry, rounded corners, squared curves, modular, geometric, high contrast (shape).
A geometric sans built from rounded-rectangle and superellipse-like forms, with consistent stroke thickness and softly squared curves throughout. Corners are broadly radiused and joins are clean, producing a modular, engineered feel. Counters tend toward rectangular apertures (notably in C, D, O, and 0), while diagonals in letters like K, V, W, X, Y and the 4 introduce sharp, straight cuts that contrast with the rounded bowls. Spacing feels generous and the overall silhouette reads wide and stable, with simple, sturdy terminals and a generally closed construction in letters like S and G.
Best suited to headlines and short-to-medium display text where its squared-round geometry can be appreciated at size. It also fits logotypes, game titles, sci‑fi or tech branding, and interface labels or HUD-style UI elements where a clean, engineered rhythm is desirable.
The tone is distinctly digital and forward-looking, evoking sci‑fi interfaces, machinery labeling, and arcade-era display typography. Its squared-round geometry suggests precision and robustness rather than softness, giving text an assertive, technical voice.
The design appears intended to translate the feel of rounded-rectangular industrial forms into a cohesive alphabet, prioritizing geometric consistency and a contemporary, tech-driven aesthetic. It aims for clear, bold silhouettes and a systematized rhythm that reads confidently in display settings.
Several glyphs emphasize a constructed, signage-like logic: the G uses a squared inner turn, the Q includes a short diagonal tail, and the lowercase set mirrors the uppercase geometry with single-storey forms and simplified structures. Numerals are similarly squared and monolithic, lending an orderly, system-like consistency across letters and numbers.