Sans Superellipse Gidaz 3 is a very bold, normal width, low contrast, upright, tall x-height font visually similar to 'Protrakt Variable' by Arkitype, 'Home Room JNL' by Jeff Levine, 'Evanston Alehouse' by Kimmy Design, and 'Reload' by Reserves (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: headlines, posters, branding, logos, packaging, techno, industrial, retro, impact, modernity, modularity, signage, blocky, squared, rounded, geometric, compact.
A heavy, geometric sans with rounded-rectangle construction and strongly squared counters. Strokes are uniform and monoline, with corners consistently softened into superellipse-like curves. Terminals are blunt and horizontal/vertical, producing a compact, modular rhythm; joins tend to be tight and angular, especially in diagonals like K, N, V, W, and X. Counters are relatively small and often rectangular (notably in O, D, P, R, and 8), and the lowercase maintains a sturdy, simplified structure with minimal curvature and a single-storey a and g.
Best suited to headlines and short statements where impact and geometric character are the priority. It works well for logos, product branding, packaging, and UI-style labels or signage that benefits from a bold, modular look and clear, high-ink forms.
The overall tone is assertive and mechanical, with a distinctly tech-forward, arcade-industrial flavor. Its rounded-square geometry reads as both friendly and rugged, evoking utilitarian interfaces, sci-fi labeling, and retro game typography.
Likely designed to deliver maximum presence with a cohesive rounded-square system, balancing strict geometry with softened corners for smoother texture at large sizes. The consistent monoline structure and compact counters suggest an emphasis on reproducible, stencil-free display shapes rather than text-centric nuance.
Spacing and silhouettes feel deliberately chunky, favoring strong word shapes over delicate detail. The numeral set matches the squared, rounded construction and remains highly uniform, reinforcing a consistent display-oriented texture across mixed-case and alphanumeric settings.