Sans Superellipse Arrud 4 is a very light, wide, low contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: ui labels, app branding, tech posters, headlines, packaging, futuristic, technical, sleek, playful, minimal, geometric system, sci-fi styling, modern identity, clean legibility, modular design, monoline, rounded, squared, geometric, modular.
A monoline sans built from rounded-rectangle and superelliptical forms, with softly squared bowls and consistent corner radii. Strokes are thin and even, with open apertures and long, gently curved terminals that sometimes end in small circular nodes. Curves tend to resolve into flat-ish verticals and horizontals, giving letters a modular, UI-like construction; diagonals are used sparingly but cleanly (notably in V/W/X). Counters are typically rectangular-rounded, and punctuation and tittles appear as simple dots, reinforcing the systematic geometry.
This face is well suited to short to medium-length text where a futuristic, geometric voice is desired—such as UI labels, product interfaces, tech-forward branding, and poster headlines. Its thin, even strokes and wide proportions can look especially crisp at larger sizes, where the superelliptical structure and node terminals become key visual features.
The overall tone feels futuristic and engineered, combining clean minimalism with a slightly whimsical, sci‑fi flavor from the rounded-square shapes and node-like terminals. It reads as precise and modern rather than warm or traditional, with a light, airy presence that suggests technology and design-forward contexts.
The design appears intended to explore a superelliptical, rounded-square construction as a distinctive system, delivering a contemporary sans that feels both mechanical and friendly. Its consistent geometry and restrained stroke behavior suggest an emphasis on modularity and a clean, modern texture for display and identity use.
Distinctive details include squared-off rounds (O/Q/0-like forms), a single-storey ‘a’, and several glyphs that incorporate dot elements as part of their identity. The numerals maintain the same rounded-rect framework, producing a cohesive, display-oriented rhythm across letters and figures.