Sans Superellipse Liso 11 is a regular weight, wide, monoline, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: tech branding, ui headlines, app design, gaming titles, packaging, futuristic, techy, playful, clean, friendly, interface clarity, futuristic branding, geometric system, modern display, rounded corners, soft terminals, geometric, modular, squarish.
This typeface is built from rounded-rectangle and superellipse forms, producing squarish bowls and softly radiused corners throughout. Strokes maintain an even thickness with smooth joins, and many counters feel inset like “windows,” giving letters a constructed, modular look. The curves are controlled and symmetrical, with open apertures and compact internal spaces that read clearly at display sizes. Uppercase forms are broad and stable, while lowercase keeps a streamlined, geometric skeleton with simplified details and minimal contrast.
This font works best where a contemporary, technology-leaning personality is desired: product logos, tech and gaming titles, interface headers, and signage that benefits from a clear, geometric silhouette. It also suits packaging and editorial display settings where a clean, modern texture and distinctive rounded-rect forms can carry the visual identity without ornament.
The overall tone feels futuristic and interface-oriented, with a friendly softness from the rounded corners. Its modular geometry evokes digital hardware, sci‑fi titling, and product design, while the clean stroke rhythm keeps it approachable rather than cold. The resulting voice is modern, slightly playful, and distinctly tech-forward.
The design appears intended to translate a rounded-rect, industrial geometry into a readable sans for modern applications. By keeping strokes consistent and corners uniformly radiused, it aims to deliver a cohesive system that feels engineered, contemporary, and brandable—especially for digital and product-facing contexts.
Distinctive superelliptical “O”/“0” shapes and squared bowls unify the character set, and the numerals follow the same rounded-rect logic for a cohesive system. The lowercase shows a constructed feel (notably in forms like m/n and s), reinforcing a designed, UI-like texture. Spacing and letterforms create a steady horizontal flow that suits short lines and headings particularly well.