Sans Superellipse Voso 6 is a regular weight, very wide, monoline, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, logos, titles, packaging, futuristic, techno, digital, space-age, modular, sci-fi branding, interface look, industrial labeling, geometric consistency, rounded corners, octagonal, geometric, angular, extended.
A geometric sans built from rounded-rectangle and chamfered forms, with consistent monoline strokes and squared terminals. Counters tend toward superelliptical shapes, and many curves are resolved as straight segments with softened corners, producing an octagonal, engineered silhouette. The set is horizontally expansive with generous internal spacing and open apertures, while diagonals (as in K, V, W, X, Y) stay crisp and linear. Overall rhythm is clean and uniform, prioritizing shape clarity and a controlled, grid-like construction.
Best suited to display settings where its extended proportions and geometric styling can read large and clean—headlines, titles, logotypes, product marks, and tech-themed packaging. It can work for short UI labels or signage when ample space is available, but the stylized, wide forms are more impactful in larger sizes than in dense body copy.
The tone is distinctly futuristic and technical, evoking sci‑fi interfaces, industrial labeling, and digital instrumentation. Its wide stance and rounded-corner geometry read as confident and synthetic rather than warm or handwritten, giving text a sleek, mechanized energy.
The design appears intended to translate a rounded-rect, superelliptical construction into a consistent alphabet for contemporary, tech-forward branding. By emphasizing uniform stroke weight, softened corners, and wide proportions, it aims to project precision and modernity while maintaining legibility through open counters and clear structural differentiation.
Distinctive constructions like the sharp, angular diagonals and flattened bowl geometry reinforce a modular, display-first feel. Round letters such as O and Q appear as rounded rectangles rather than true circles, and the numerals adopt the same segmented, engineered language for a cohesive alphanumeric system.