Sans Superellipse Adbuh 1 is a regular weight, normal width, monoline, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: ui labels, tech branding, product design, signage, headlines, futuristic, techy, clean, friendly, modern, ui friendliness, modern geometry, systematic look, brand distinctiveness, rounded, soft corners, geometric, modular, minimal.
A rounded, geometric sans built from superelliptical curves and softened rectangular forms. Strokes remain consistently even, with squared terminals that are gently radiused, producing a smooth, monoline texture. Counters tend toward rounded-rectangle shapes, and the overall construction feels modular and systematic, with simplified joins and broad curves in letters like C, G, O, and U. Lowercase forms are compact and tidy, with single-storey a and g, short cross strokes, and understated punctuation that maintains the same rounded logic.
Well-suited for interface labels, dashboards, and product typography where clean geometry and rounded corners complement modern UI shapes. It also fits tech and gaming branding, packaging, and signage, especially for short to medium strings where the distinctive rounded-rect construction can carry a recognizable voice.
The tone is contemporary and forward-looking, combining a tech-interface crispness with approachable softness. Its rounded corners and steady rhythm give it a friendly, “designed” feel rather than an organic or calligraphic one, evoking digital products, sci‑fi labeling, and streamlined industrial graphics.
The design appears intended to deliver a sleek, modern sans with a superellipse-based construction that echoes contemporary device and UI geometry. By keeping strokes even and corners softened, it aims to balance precision and friendliness while maintaining a consistent, system-like rhythm across letters and numerals.
Several glyphs lean into distinctive, display-minded silhouettes—particularly the angular-digit styling and the squared, rounded-corner bowls—while keeping letterforms highly consistent. The set reads best where its geometric personality can be part of the visual identity, and the uniform stroke behavior helps maintain clarity across mixed-case settings.