Sans Superellipse Onnah 6 is a regular weight, normal width, monoline, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: ui labels, app branding, tech posters, wayfinding, product titling, techy, futuristic, geometric, clean, playful, tech branding, system design, modern signage, digital ui, sci-fi tone, rounded corners, squared curves, rectilinear, modular, wide apertures.
This typeface is built from rounded-rectangle geometry, with superelliptic bowls and corners that stay consistently softened rather than fully circular. Strokes are even and monoline, producing a crisp, engineered rhythm across capitals, lowercase, and numerals. Curves tend to resolve into flat-ish horizontals and verticals, giving letters a squared, modular feel; counters are generally open and rectangular, supporting clarity at display sizes. Terminals are mostly blunt with rounded edges, and diagonals (notably in V/W/X/Y) feel clean and mechanically precise. The numerals follow the same rounded-rect framework, with a slashed zero and squared interior spaces that reinforce the systemized construction.
Best suited to headlines, UI labels, dashboards, and brand marks where a modern, geometric voice is desired. It also performs well for signage-style short text, gaming or tech-themed posters, and packaging that benefits from a clean, modular aesthetic; for extended reading, it will likely be most comfortable at larger sizes where its squared curves and tight detailing remain clear.
The overall tone is contemporary and interface-forward, evoking digital products, sci‑fi signage, and industrial design language. Its rounded-square construction adds approachability compared to hard-edged techno faces, while still reading distinctly modern and synthetic.
The design appears intended to translate rounded-rect geometry into a cohesive, systemized sans that feels engineered and contemporary. It prioritizes consistency of corner treatment and a techno-industrial silhouette, while keeping forms open enough to remain legible in compact display and interface scenarios.
Distinctive features include the squared, open shapes in C/G/S, a compact, geometric lowercase with simple, utilitarian joins, and a consistent corner radius that ties curves and stems together. The slashed zero improves quick differentiation in contexts where O/0 confusion may occur.