Sans Superellipse Vuwy 9 is a regular weight, very wide, low contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, branding, logos, ui display, futuristic, techno, industrial, digital, space-age, sci-fi tone, technical branding, modular system, display impact, modular, rounded corners, geometric, boxy, extended.
A geometric sans built from squared-off, superellipse-like forms with consistently rounded corners and monoline strokes. Curves tend to resolve into flat segments, giving bowls and counters a rounded-rectangle feel rather than true circles. The construction is modular and angular in the diagonals, with clean joins and mostly closed, rectangular counters; several glyphs use open apertures and cut-ins to maintain the squared rhythm. Numerals and capitals keep a strong horizontal emphasis, producing an extended, display-forward texture with even color and tight, engineered shapes.
Best suited to display sizes where its squared bowls and rounded corners can read clearly—headlines, posters, title sequences, and brand marks in tech or automotive contexts. It can also work for interface labels, dashboards, packaging, and wayfinding where a clean, engineered voice is desired, though long paragraphs may feel visually assertive due to the strong geometric rhythm.
The overall tone is futuristic and technical, with a crisp, machine-made presence reminiscent of sci-fi interfaces and industrial labeling. Its rounded-rectangle geometry reads as modern and digital rather than friendly or handwritten, balancing severity with softened corners for a sleek, controlled feel.
The design appears intended to deliver a distinctive extended, high-tech voice by translating classic sans structures into rounded-rectangle modules. It prioritizes a consistent grid, even stroke color, and a controlled, machined silhouette to create immediate recognition in display contexts.
The design leans on straight horizontals and verticals, with diagonals used sparingly and in a structured way, which reinforces a grid-based, systematized look. Openings and notches in letters like C, G, and S contribute to legibility while keeping the distinctive squared geometry. The compact, squared punctuation-like details (e.g., the i/j dots) echo the font’s modular construction.