Sans Superellipse Verus 9 is a light, very wide, low contrast, upright, tall x-height font.
Keywords: tech branding, ui titling, headlines, signage, posters, futuristic, technical, clean, sleek, minimal, systematic, modernize, soften tech, clarity, rounded, monoline, geometric, superelliptic, modular.
A rounded, monoline sans built from superellipse-like curves and softened rectangular geometry. Strokes keep an even thickness with generous corner radii, producing squarish counters in letters like O, D, and P while maintaining smooth continuity through arches and bowls. Proportions are expansive and airy, with wide set characters and open apertures; terminals are consistently rounded or squared-off with softened edges rather than sharp cuts. The overall rhythm feels modular and engineered, with simplified joins and a steady baseline presence that reads clearly in display sizes.
Best suited to technology branding, interface titling, and modern editorial headlines where its wide, rounded geometry can be a defining visual element. It also works well for signage, packaging callouts, and poster typography that benefits from a clean, futuristic voice and strong shape consistency.
The tone is modern and tech-forward, evoking interfaces, sci‑fi labeling, and contemporary industrial design. Its rounded-rectangle construction adds a friendly softness to an otherwise precise, engineered aesthetic, balancing approachability with a distinctly digital feel.
The design appears intended to translate a rounded-rectangle, superelliptic construction into a practical sans for contemporary display use. By keeping strokes uniform and corners consistently softened, it aims to deliver a distinctive, system-like look that remains orderly and readable while emphasizing a modern, digital identity.
Distinctive superelliptic numerals and rounded rectangular counters reinforce a cohesive system across letters and figures. The design emphasizes uniform stroke logic and consistent curvature, giving text a smooth, continuous flow and a recognizable “device UI” silhouette in headlines and short passages.