Sans Superellipse Vamat 3 is a regular weight, very wide, low contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: ui design, tech branding, signage, dashboards, product labeling, tech, futuristic, clinical, minimal, precise, interface aesthetic, geometric system, modern branding, distinctive display, rounded corners, squared curves, monoline, geometric, modular.
A geometric sans built from squared, superelliptic curves and long, straight runs, giving many letters a rounded-rectangle skeleton. Strokes are monoline with smooth joins and consistently softened corners; bowls and counters tend toward boxy ovals rather than circles. The capitals are spacious and open, with wide proportions and a steady horizontal rhythm, while lowercase forms keep simple, engineered constructions (single-storey a and g, compact shoulders, and flat terminals). Numerals follow the same rounded-rect geometry, with a notably square zero and segmented, horizontal emphasis in figures like 2 and 3.
This style is well suited to UI and app interfaces, dashboards, wayfinding, and other contexts where a crisp, contemporary sans can carry a technical tone. It can also work effectively in tech-forward branding, product labeling, and short display lines where the squared-rounded geometry becomes a recognizable visual signature.
The overall tone is modern and technical, with a clean, device-interface feel and a mild sci‑fi edge. Its rounded-square geometry reads orderly and controlled rather than friendly, lending a sleek, contemporary character that suggests engineered precision.
The font appears intended to translate rounded-rectangle geometry into a coherent, legible sans system, prioritizing a consistent modular logic across glyphs. Its design choices suggest an emphasis on contemporary interface aesthetics and a distinctive, engineered silhouette for modern display and branding use.
The design language stays highly consistent across uppercase, lowercase, and numerals, reinforcing a modular, system-like impression. Curved strokes are restrained and often resolve into straight segments, which makes the silhouette feel structured and slightly industrial.