Sans Superellipse Hadin 2 is a bold, normal width, monoline, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: ui labels, app design, signage, brand systems, headlines, techy, friendly, modern, utilitarian, clean, clarity, modernity, systematic design, friendly geometry, screen readability, rounded, soft corners, geometric, boxy, compact.
A geometric sans built from rounded-rectangle and superellipse-like forms, with smooth corners and even, monoline stroke weight. Curves tend to flatten into gentle horizontals and verticals, giving bowls and counters a squarish, engineered feel rather than a purely circular one. Terminals are consistently rounded, and joins are clean and low-contrast. Uppercase shapes read compact and sturdy; lowercase forms keep simple constructions with open counters and short, controlled extenders. Numerals follow the same softened-rectilinear logic, staying clear and steady in rhythm.
Well-suited to interface typography, dashboards, and on-screen labels where a stable, high-impact silhouette helps at a range of sizes. It also fits contemporary branding, packaging, and editorial headings that want a clean geometric voice with friendly rounding. The compact, squared curves make it effective for logos and short display lines, while the steady rhythm supports longer UI or informational text blocks.
The overall tone is contemporary and approachable, with a distinctly technical, device-friendly flavor. Rounded corners soften the geometry, making it feel less rigid than a pure industrial grotesk while still reading as precise and systematic. It suggests modern interfaces, wayfinding, and product typography where clarity and a calm, engineered personality are desired.
The font appears designed to blend geometric rigor with softened ergonomics: a modular, squircle-driven construction that stays highly consistent across the set, aiming for clarity, contemporary neutrality, and a subtle tech-forward identity.
The design’s character comes from its squircle-based curvature: round letters (like O/C/G) appear slightly squared, and straight-sided letters keep subtly radiused edges. This creates a consistent, modular texture across lines of text, especially noticeable in mixed-case settings and numeric strings.