Sans Superellipse Adrus 7 is a regular weight, wide, monoline, reverse italic, normal x-height font.
Keywords: tech branding, ui labels, product titles, headlines, posters, futuristic, technical, clean, sci‑fi, sleek, futurism, ui clarity, modern branding, motion feel, geometric consistency, rounded corners, squared curves, oblique, geometric, streamlined.
A geometric sans built from squared, superelliptical forms with consistently rounded corners and mostly uniform stroke thickness. Many curves resolve into softened right angles, giving bowls and counters a rounded-rectangle feel, while diagonals are crisp and clean. The overall stance is subtly backslanted (reverse-oblique), with open, simplified apertures and compact joins that keep shapes crisp at display sizes. Numerals and capitals follow the same squared-round logic, producing a cohesive, modular rhythm across the set.
Best suited to short-to-medium display settings where its squared-round geometry can read clearly: technology and gaming branding, app and device UI labels, product headlines, posters, and motion graphics. It can also work for concise supporting text (menus, captions, dashboards) when generous spacing is available.
The font reads as contemporary and tech-forward, with a distinctly sci‑fi edge created by its rounded-rect geometry and controlled, engineered detailing. It feels precise and modern rather than friendly, projecting a clean, digital tone suited to interface and product contexts.
The design appears intended to merge geometric clarity with a softened, rounded-rectangle construction, creating a distinctive modernist voice for digital and futuristic themes. The reverse-oblique stance suggests speed and dynamism while keeping the letterforms disciplined and consistent.
The squared counters in letters like O/Q and the flattened, radiused terminals create a strong “device UI” signature. The reverse-oblique angle adds motion and attitude without becoming aggressive, and the simplified forms help maintain a consistent texture in short lines and headlines.