Sans Superellipse Alkor 6 is a regular weight, normal width, monoline, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: ui labels, app branding, tech packaging, headlines, wayfinding, futuristic, techy, geometric, clean, industrial, systematic design, digital tone, modern branding, clarity, rounded corners, rectilinear, modular, open counters, sharp joins.
A geometric sans with a rounded-rectangle construction throughout, combining straight runs and broad-radius corners into a consistent superelliptic silhouette. Strokes are even and crisp, with squared terminals that often soften into rounded outer corners, creating a modular, engineered feel. Many curves resolve into flattened arcs rather than true circles, and several diagonals and junctions form pointed, angular joins (notably in letters with V-shaped structure). The overall rhythm is spacious and steady, with clear interior counters and a slightly squared, contemporary texture in both capitals and lowercase.
It suits UI and product contexts where clean geometry and high contrast against backgrounds are needed—buttons, navigation labels, dashboards, and device screens. The modular shapes also work well for short headlines, logos, and tech-forward packaging, and can hold up in signage or wayfinding where simple forms and open counters aid quick recognition.
The font reads as modern and technical, evoking interfaces, instrumentation, and sci‑fi industrial design. Its rounded-rect geometry keeps it approachable while the angular joins and modular proportions add a precise, engineered tone.
The design appears intended to deliver a cohesive, system-like voice built from rounded-rect primitives, balancing friendliness with a precise, digital sensibility. It prioritizes consistency of curvature and terminal treatment to create a recognizable, contemporary texture across letters and numerals.
Distinctive details include a squared, rounded-corner bowl style, a single-storey lowercase a, a compact, squared-o, and numerals that follow the same rounded-rect logic for strong set cohesion. The lowercase l is a simple vertical stroke, while the lowercase t has a minimal crossbar, reinforcing the pared-down, functional character.