Sans Superellipse Veruf 1 is a light, very wide, monoline, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, logotypes, ui, posters, packaging, futuristic, techy, sleek, clean, space-age, modernization, systematization, tech branding, display clarity, rounded, geometric, modular, rectilinear, soft-cornered.
A geometric sans built from rounded-rectangle/superellipse forms, with consistently softened corners and smooth, monoline strokes. Curves tend to resolve into flat-ish horizontals and verticals, giving bowls and counters a squared, capsule-like feel (notably in O, D, 0, 8, and 9). Terminals are predominantly blunt and rounded, and many joins are engineered with careful radii rather than sharp vertices, producing a tidy, manufactured rhythm. The overall construction leans modular, with open apertures and simplified interior shapes that keep letters crisp even when tightly spaced in display settings.
Best suited for display-sized typography where its superelliptic geometry and rounded terminals can read clearly: headlines, brand marks, product titling, posters, and tech or lifestyle packaging. It also fits interface or motion-graphics contexts where a clean, engineered aesthetic is desirable, especially for short labels, dashboards, and on-screen titling.
The design reads as contemporary and tech-forward, with a calm, engineered precision. Its rounded-rect geometry suggests sci‑fi interfaces, industrial design, and modern hardware branding, while the softened corners keep the tone approachable rather than aggressive.
The font appears designed to translate rounded-rectangle industrial geometry into a legible alphabet, prioritizing consistency, smooth corners, and a streamlined, modern silhouette. Its simplified forms and distinctive numerals suggest an intention to feel contemporary and system-like, bridging branding and screen-oriented design.
Several glyphs emphasize distinctive, functional details—like the Q with a straight, vertical tail and the 2/3 built from horizontal bands and rounded corners—which reinforces a digital, UI-like flavor. Numerals mirror the same rounded-rectangle logic as the uppercase, supporting a cohesive system for headings and data-forward layouts.