Sans Superellipse Otrul 15 is a bold, normal width, low contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: display, branding, posters, headlines, gaming ui, techno, futuristic, industrial, arcade, sci-fi, tech aesthetic, strong identity, modular forms, display impact, brand voice, rounded corners, rectilinear, squared, geometric, monoline.
A geometric sans built from rounded-rectangle strokes and squared counters, with a monoline feel and softened outer corners. Curves resolve into superellipse-like turns rather than true circular bowls, producing a rectilinear rhythm across both caps and lowercase. Terminals are mostly flat and horizontal/vertical, and many forms feature narrow interior cut-ins that echo the outer outline, creating a slightly “inline” impression in letters like A, B, D, O, and P. The overall texture is compact and sturdy, with generous corner radii and tight apertures that emphasize a modular, engineered construction.
Best suited for display work where its geometric personality can read clearly: headlines, posters, packaging titles, logotypes, and technology-leaning branding. It also fits game and app interfaces, signage, and product labeling where a sturdy, engineered look is desired. For long passages of small text, the tight apertures and stylized interiors may become visually dense compared to more conventional sans designs.
The font conveys a distinctly technological, futuristic tone, reminiscent of control panels, arcade titles, and industrial labeling. Its rounded-square geometry feels both friendly and mechanical, balancing soft corners with a disciplined grid-like structure. The repeated inset detailing adds a synthetic, display-driven character that reads as designed rather than handwritten or humanist.
The design appears intended to deliver a cohesive, modular techno aesthetic using rounded-rectangle geometry and consistent stroke behavior. By repeating inset cut-ins and squared counters across the alphabet and numerals, it aims for strong recognizability and a distinctive display voice while keeping the overall forms clean and sans-serif.
Several glyphs lean into stylized construction: the uppercase set is especially architectural, while the lowercase maintains the same squared logic with simplified bowls and straight-sided stems. Numerals follow the same rounded-rect system, with angular transitions and compact counters that keep the set visually consistent in UI-like contexts. The silhouette-heavy design remains legible at larger sizes, where the interior cut-ins and distinctive apertures become a key part of the identity.