Sans Superellipse Berur 2 is a very light, very narrow, low contrast, italic, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, branding, tech ui, motion graphics, sleek, technical, futuristic, cool, austere, streamlined display, tech aesthetic, speed emphasis, minimal branding, monoline, compressed, oblique, linear, rounded corners.
This typeface uses extremely slender, monoline strokes with a strongly oblique stance and markedly compressed proportions. Curves and terminals are softened into rounded-rectangle forms, giving bowls and counters a superelliptical feel rather than circular geometry. The drawing stays consistent and crisp across letters and figures, with tight internal spacing and a tall, streamlined silhouette that emphasizes vertical and diagonal strokes. Overall texture is airy and delicate, with minimal modulation and a clean, engineered rhythm.
Best suited to display contexts where its thin, oblique, condensed silhouette can read as intentional: headlines, posters, and brand wordmarks with a modern/technical brief. It can also work for short UI labels or interface styling in high-resolution environments, and for motion graphics where the slant and narrowness reinforce speed and direction.
The tone is sleek and forward-looking, reading as technical and precision-driven rather than warm or expressive. Its thin, slanted construction evokes speed and modernity, with a cool, minimalist character that feels at home in contemporary design systems.
The design appears intended to deliver a highly streamlined, modern sans voice—combining compressed proportions, an oblique axis, and rounded-rectangle geometry to create a distinctive, aerodynamic presence. The consistent monoline construction suggests an emphasis on clarity of form and a precise, engineered aesthetic over text comfort.
Because the strokes are so fine and the forms so condensed, the font’s readability depends heavily on size and reproduction quality; it will appear particularly fragile at small sizes or in low-contrast printing. The digit set matches the same compressed, rounded-rectilinear language, maintaining a uniform, streamlined color in mixed alphanumeric settings.