Sans Superellipse Radoy 3 is a bold, very narrow, low contrast, upright, tall x-height font visually similar to 'Sharp Grotesk Latin' and 'Sharp Grotesk Paneuropean' by Monotype and 'Hype vol 2' by Positype (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: headlines, posters, branding, packaging, signage, condensed, modern, assertive, industrial, editorial, space saving, modern display, impactful titles, clean utility, monoline, vertical, compact, clean, crisp.
A tightly condensed sans with monoline strokes and a strong vertical rhythm. Curves are built from rounded-rectangle geometry, producing narrow bowls and smooth, squared-off terminals that stay consistent across letters and figures. Counters are compact and openings are controlled, giving the alphabet a dense texture; diagonals (like V/W/X) are steep and economical, while round forms (O/Q/0/8) read as tall superellipses rather than circles. Lowercase shows a tall proportion relative to capitals, with simple, sturdy joins and minimal detailing for punctuation and dots.
Best suited to headlines and display sizes where its compressed width can fit long titles into limited horizontal space. It can also work for branding and packaging that needs a tall, modern voice, and for signage-style applications where a narrow, high-impact sans is desirable.
The overall tone is modern and efficient, with an assertive, space-saving presence. Its compressed stance and squared-round shapes evoke contemporary editorial design, transit/wayfinding cues, and an industrial, engineered feel rather than a soft or handwritten personality.
Likely designed as a condensed display sans that maximizes information density while keeping a clean, contemporary silhouette. The consistent monoline construction and superelliptical curves suggest an intention to feel structured and modern, with strong uniformity across letters and numerals.
The condensed construction makes vertical strokes visually dominant, so spacing and line length feel tightly packed in running text. Figures match the same narrow, rounded-rectangular logic, helping numerals sit cleanly alongside caps in headlines and data-heavy settings.