Sans Superellipse Arrih 2 is a very light, wide, monoline, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: ui design, app interfaces, product branding, tech packaging, wayfinding, futuristic, minimal, technical, sleek, clinical, modernity, system coherence, clarity, tech identity, brand distinctiveness, geometric, rounded, modular, open counters, soft corners.
A monoline geometric sans built from rounded-rectangle (superellipse) geometry, with consistently softened corners and largely uniform stroke weight. Curves resolve into flat-ish terminals and squared bowls, creating a modular, engineered rhythm across the alphabet. Apertures are generally open (notably in C, c, and e), counters read cleanly, and horizontals/verticals stay disciplined with little to no contrast. The lowercase is simple and functional, with single-storey forms and compact joins; numerals follow the same rounded-rect logic for a cohesive, system-like set.
Well-suited to interface typography, dashboards, and digital products where a clean geometric voice and distinctive rounded-rect forms help branding stand out. It can also work for short-to-medium headlines, packaging, and signage systems that want a modern, engineered feel without sharp corners.
The overall tone feels contemporary and tech-forward, combining friendliness from the rounded corners with a controlled, instrument-panel precision. Its restrained detailing and consistent geometry suggest a clean, futuristic neutrality rather than expressive warmth.
The design appears intended to deliver a highly consistent superellipse-based construction that reads modern and technical while remaining approachable. By minimizing stroke modulation and relying on rounded-rectangle bowls and open apertures, it aims for clarity and a recognizable, systemized silhouette across letters and figures.
Several shapes emphasize rectilinear curves over true circles, giving letters a distinct “rounded-square” silhouette that stays consistent in both text and titling. The design language is especially evident in bowls (O/o/0, D/d, P/p) and in the squared-off arcs of S/s and G/g, which reinforces a cohesive, UI-ready texture.