Sans Superellipse Labu 2 is a regular weight, very wide, low contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, branding, ui, posters, signage, futuristic, tech, sleek, friendly, retro-future, streamlined modernity, digital clarity, futurist tone, soft geometry, rounded, monoline, soft corners, geometric, wide-set.
A rounded, monoline sans with superelliptical geometry and consistently softened corners. Strokes maintain an even thickness, with terminals that end in rounded caps and joins that favor smooth, continuous transitions over sharp angles. Counters tend toward rounded-rectangle shapes, and many letters feel horizontally expanded, producing airy internal space and generous sidebearing rhythm. Distinctive constructions include a single-storey “a,” a compact crossbar-less feel in several forms, and simplified diagonals in letters like K, V, W, and Y that read as clean, engineered strokes rather than calligraphic shapes.
Best suited to short-to-medium text where its wide proportions and smooth geometry can breathe—such as headlines, tech and product branding, interface titles, and wayfinding/signage. It can also work well in posters and packaging where a clean, futuristic voice is desired and ample horizontal space is available.
The overall tone is modern and tech-leaning, with a calm, approachable warmth created by the soft corners and rounded terminals. Its wide stance and streamlined shapes evoke retro-futurist display typography—confident, clean, and slightly playful—without feeling decorative or noisy.
The design appears intended to deliver a streamlined, digital-friendly sans that emphasizes smooth superelliptical forms and a wide, open rhythm. Its simplified constructions and rounded finishing suggest an aim for contemporary clarity with a distinctive, futuristic character that stays legible while looking engineered and polished.
The uppercase set is highly stylized with rounded-rectangle bowls and open, streamlined apertures, while the lowercase keeps the same soft geometry and simple, single-storey structures. Numerals follow the same design logic, using wide, rounded forms and minimal stroke modulation, which helps maintain a consistent texture across mixed alphanumeric settings.