Sans Superellipse Vovy 14 is a very light, very wide, low contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: logotypes, headlines, posters, ui display, branding, futuristic, technical, minimal, space-age, sleek, modernization, tech aesthetic, geometric clarity, streamlined display, brand distinctiveness, monoline, geometric, rounded, extended, airy.
This is a monoline geometric sans built from rounded-rectangle and superellipse-like shapes, giving counters and bowls a softly squared, aerodynamic feel. Strokes stay consistently thin with clean terminals, and curves transition smoothly into straight segments for a precise, engineered outline. Proportions are notably extended, with generous horizontal reach and open interior spaces; round letters like O/C/G read as wide capsules rather than circles. Uppercase forms favor simple geometry (notably angular diagonals in A/V/W/X/Y) while lowercase remains restrained and compact, with single-storey a and g and unobtrusive joins. Numerals follow the same rounded-rect logic, staying linear and streamlined rather than typographically traditional.
Well suited to logotypes, headlines, and short promotional copy where a futuristic, engineered look is desirable. It can work for UI or product display typography (titles, labels, hero text) and for tech, automotive, audio, or sports branding that benefits from a sleek, extended silhouette.
The overall tone is cool, contemporary, and mildly sci‑fi, evoking interface typography, instrumentation, and modern industrial design. Its thin, spacious construction feels lightweight and refined, with a calm, controlled rhythm rather than expressive or handwritten energy.
The design appears intended to blend strict geometric construction with softened corners to achieve a modern, high-tech voice without feeling harsh. By combining wide capsule-like rounds with sharp diagonals and minimal detailing, it aims for a distinctive display presence and a consistent, system-like visual language.
The design leans on a consistent rounded-corner motif across letters and digits, producing a cohesive "soft-tech" texture. Diagonals are crisp and slightly stylized, which gives words a distinctive zig-zag sparkle in combinations like AV/WX/XY. The very thin strokes suggest it will be most effective at display sizes or in contexts where delicacy is a feature rather than a constraint.