Sans Superellipse Wije 13 is a regular weight, very wide, monoline, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: ui, signage, branding, tech logos, headlines, futuristic, techy, sleek, minimal, sci‑fi, systemic design, futurism, interface clarity, brand distinctiveness, geometric cohesion, rounded, square-round, geometric, modular, streamlined.
A geometric sans built from rounded-rectangle and superellipse shapes, with a consistent monoline stroke and broad, open counters. Corners are heavily radiused and terminals tend to be squared-off rather than tapered, giving forms a soft-rectilinear feel. Curves are tightened into boxy bowls (notably in C, D, O, Q, and lowercases like a, e, o), while diagonals in A, K, V, W, X, Y add crisp structure. Spacing and proportions read deliberately engineered, with generous width and a steady rhythm that keeps text even and clean.
Works well for UI labeling, dashboards, and product interfaces where a clean, engineered voice is desired. The wide, rounded geometry also suits tech branding, futuristic packaging, wayfinding, and short headlines where its distinctive superelliptical forms can read as a design feature. In longer text, it remains orderly and consistent, especially at medium-to-large sizes.
The overall tone is modern and technological, leaning toward sci‑fi and interface aesthetics. Rounded corners soften the geometry, keeping it approachable while still feeling precise and machine-made. It suggests speed, hardware, and digital products rather than editorial warmth.
The design appears intended to translate a rounded-rectangular industrial geometry into a friendly, legible sans, balancing strict construction with softened corners. Its coherent treatment of curves and horizontals suggests a focus on system consistency for modern digital and product-oriented typography.
Distinctive details include a single-storey lowercase a, a compact curved-shoulder r, and a squared, rounded e with a clear horizontal bar. Numerals share the same rounded-rectilinear logic—0 is a soft rectangle, 8 stacks two rounded bowls, and 2/3 use flat horizontals with rounded turns—supporting a cohesive, system-like look across alphanumerics.