Sans Superellipse Voda 1 is a regular weight, very wide, low contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: branding, headlines, tech ui, product design, posters, futuristic, techno, space-age, sleek, retro-tech, geometric system, tech branding, modern signage, interface styling, rounded corners, squarish rounds, monoline, open counters, geometric.
A monoline sans built from rounded-rectangle and superellipse-like shapes, with consistently softened corners and mostly straight, horizontal terminals. Curves tend to resolve into squarish bowls rather than perfect circles, producing wide, stable counters in letters like O, D, and Q. Diagonals are clean and crisp (V, W, X, Y), while joins are simplified and mechanical, keeping stroke behavior even and systematic. The lowercase follows the same geometric logic, with single-storey forms and restrained detailing; numerals echo the rounded-rect geometry for a cohesive, engineered look.
Best suited for branding and headline typography where a sleek, futuristic voice is desired, such as technology, gaming, electronics, and mobility. It can also work for UI titling, dashboards, and product or packaging graphics where geometric consistency and clean spacing read as modern and engineered.
The overall tone feels futuristic and instrument-like, evoking sci‑fi interfaces, retro computer displays, and industrial product labeling. Its rounded corners keep it friendly and approachable, while the squared curves and long horizontals add a precise, technical character.
The font appears designed to translate superellipse geometry into an easy-to-set sans that feels contemporary and tech-forward, balancing soft corners with crisp structure. Its letterforms prioritize a consistent system of rounded rectangles and straight terminals to create a recognizable, modular texture in words and numbers.
The design leans on flat-sided bowls and open apertures, which helps maintain clarity at display sizes and gives lines of text a smooth, continuous rhythm. The distinctive rounded-rect ‘o’/‘0’ family and the understated, squared shoulders in letters like n and m reinforce a consistent, modular voice across cases and figures.