Sans Superellipse Vabiw 3 is a regular weight, wide, monoline, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: ui labels, headlines, posters, branding, signage, futuristic, techno, clean, geometric, playful, interface clarity, retro futurism, geometric branding, systematic design, rounded corners, modular, boxy, squared, open counters.
A rounded-rectangle, modular sans built from straight runs joined by generously radiused corners. Strokes stay even throughout, producing a crisp, schematic texture with minimal contrast and a slightly expanded footprint. Curves are largely “squircle” corners rather than true circles, and many forms use open or partially open bowls, giving counters a more engineered feel. The lowercase follows the same constructed logic, with simplified, squarish shapes and uncluttered terminals that keep the rhythm consistent across text.
Best suited to interface labels, dashboards, packaging, and tech-oriented branding where clean geometry and strong silhouette recognition are priorities. It also performs well in headlines and short blocks of copy, especially when you want a retro-futuristic or digital tone. For long-form reading, it will be most effective when set with ample size and spacing so the constructed details remain comfortable.
The overall tone reads futuristic and technical, with a friendly edge from the soft corner radii. It evokes digital interfaces, sci‑fi labeling, and retro-future graphics—precise and modern, but not cold. The distinct, modular construction also adds a subtle game/UI and gadget aesthetic.
The design appears intended to translate a superelliptic, rounded-rect geometry into a practical sans for modern display and interface contexts. By keeping strokes uniform and corners consistently radiused, it aims for a cohesive, system-like feel while still offering distinctive, stylized letterforms for character.
Spacing appears fairly generous and the shapes remain clear at display sizes, where the corner geometry becomes a defining feature. Some characters lean into stylized construction (notably angular/simplified diagonals and open forms), which increases personality but can make long passages feel more like interface typography than traditional body text.