Sans Superellipse Orrap 6 is a regular weight, normal width, low contrast, upright, normal x-height, monospaced font.
Keywords: ui, dashboards, code samples, labels, posters, technical, utilitarian, industrial, systematic, retro-digital, clarity, consistency, grid-fit, interface, boxy, compact, modular, rounded corners, squared bowls.
The letterforms are built from sturdy, straight strokes and tightly radiused corners, producing a squared-yet-rounded silhouette throughout. Curves tend to resolve into superelliptical bowls and counters (notably in O, D, and 0), and many joins end in clean, flat terminals. Proportions are compact with consistent spacing, and the rhythm is highly regular, reinforcing a grid-based, modular look across uppercase, lowercase, and numerals.
It suits UI mockups, terminal/console styling, dashboards, and settings where a disciplined, engineered voice is desired. It can also work well for signage-like labeling, data tables, and packaging or product graphics that benefit from a compact, industrial sans with softened corners. Display use in headlines is especially effective when you want a retro-tech or equipment-label feel.
This font gives a utilitarian, technical tone with a calm, matter-of-fact presence. Its rounded-rectangle construction softens the feel just enough to read as approachable rather than harsh, while still staying distinctly machine-like and systematic. Overall it evokes terminals, labeling, and engineered interfaces more than expressive branding.
The design appears intended for structured settings where uniform rhythm and predictable shapes matter. Its rounded-rect geometry and consistent stroke behavior suggest a focus on legibility under constraint—such as fixed spacing, tight layouts, or pixel-adjacent interface aesthetics—while keeping forms simple and repeatable.
Distinctive rounded-rect counters and squared curves give many glyphs a “softened hardware” character. Numerals are similarly constructed, with a particularly geometric 0 that reads as a rounded rectangle with an inset counter, reinforcing the font’s grid-driven consistency.