Sans Superellipse Vujo 3 is a regular weight, very wide, monoline, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: ui, signage, headlines, branding, product labels, futuristic, tech, clean, clinical, industrial, geometric modernism, interface clarity, tech branding, modular system, rounded corners, superelliptic, geometric, modular, wide-set.
A geometric sans built from superelliptic and rounded-rectangle forms, with consistently rounded corners and uniform stroke thickness. The caps run wide with generous interior counters and open apertures, creating a spacious rhythm in words. Curves resolve into smooth, squared-off bowls (notably in C, G, O, Q, and e), while diagonals in A, K, V, W, X, and Y stay crisp and straight. Terminals are predominantly blunt and squared, and the overall construction feels modular, balancing tight radii with long horizontals and verticals for a stable, engineered texture.
Best suited to interface typography, wayfinding, product branding, and headline settings where a futuristic, engineered look is desired. The broad proportions and open counters help at medium-to-large sizes on screens, while the rounded corners keep dense lines from feeling harsh. It can also work for labels, packaging, and tech-forward editorial display where a clean, modular rhythm is beneficial.
The font reads as modern and system-like, with a sci‑fi and interface tone driven by its rounded-rect geometry. Its wide stance and softened corners keep it friendly enough for consumer tech while still feeling precise and utilitarian. Overall it conveys a sense of sleek hardware design, dashboards, and contemporary industrial branding.
The design appears intended to translate rounded-rectangle and superellipse geometry into a readable sans, combining strict modular construction with softened corners. It prioritizes a contemporary, device-oriented aesthetic and consistent alphanumeric cohesion for modern layouts and screen-centric environments.
Letterforms favor rectangular counters and flattened curves, giving text a distinctly superelliptic silhouette. The lowercase shows single-storey forms where applicable (such as a and g), reinforcing the geometric, contemporary voice. Numerals share the same rounded-rectangle logic, producing a cohesive alphanumeric set suited to structured layouts.