Sans Superellipse Ofmod 13 is a bold, narrow, low contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: logotypes, headlines, posters, packaging, ui display, futuristic, techy, playful, industrial, sci‑fi, geometric branding, tech display, modular system, high impact, rounded, geometric, squarish, soft corners, modular.
A compact geometric sans built from rounded-rectangle (superellipse-like) forms, with softly chamfered terminals and consistently heavy strokes. Curves and counters skew squarish rather than circular, giving letters a modular, constructed feel; joins are clean and mostly monoline, with minimal stroke modulation. Uppercase shapes are broad and blocky with large-radius corners, while lowercase keeps a sturdy, simplified structure (single-story a, simple g) and short, controlled extenders. Numerals follow the same rounded-rect geometry, with distinctive angular transitions and open interior spaces that preserve clarity at display sizes.
Best suited to logos, headlines, posters, and packaging where a compact, high-impact voice is needed. It also fits UI or product-display contexts (titles, navigation labels, dashboards) when a tech-forward, geometric aesthetic is desired, though its weight and stylization suggest using it primarily at larger sizes.
The overall tone reads modern and gadget-like—friendly due to the rounded corners, but still assertive and engineered. Its squarish curves and uniform heft evoke interface typography, arcade/sci‑fi titling, and contemporary industrial branding.
The design intention appears to be a modern superellipse-driven sans that balances a friendly rounded silhouette with a precise, engineered construction. It prioritizes strong presence and a cohesive modular system across letters and numerals for contemporary branding and display typography.
Several glyphs lean into stylized, sign-like construction (notably the angular V/W and the geometric S/Z), reinforcing a custom, modular rhythm. Spacing appears tuned for headline use, with dense letterforms and strong word-shape contrast in mixed-case settings.