Sans Superellipse Vader 12 is a regular weight, wide, monoline, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: ui, signage, branding, headlines, posters, futuristic, tech, clean, geometric, playful, digital aesthetic, geometric system, clarity, modern branding, display impact, rounded corners, squared curves, soft terminals, modular, high legibility.
A geometric sans built from rounded-rectangle and superellipse forms, with uniform stroke thickness and softly squared corners throughout. Curves tend to flatten into straight segments, creating boxy bowls and counters (notably in C, D, O, and 0) while maintaining smooth corner radii. The proportions run on the wide side with generous apertures and clear internal spaces, and the rhythm feels modular and systematic. Lowercase mirrors the same construction with single-storey forms and compact, squared-off shoulders, and the numerals follow the same rounded-rect geometry for a consistent set.
This font suits UI and product labeling where clarity and a modern, technical voice are needed, and it performs well in signage and wayfinding thanks to its open counters and steady stroke. It also fits tech branding and display headlines where a futuristic, geometric personality is desired without sacrificing readability.
The overall tone is contemporary and machine-friendly, suggesting digital interfaces, instrumentation, and sci‑fi branding. Rounded corners soften the engineered structure, giving it an approachable, slightly playful feel rather than a stark industrial one.
The design appears intended to translate a rounded-rectangle geometry into a practical, readable sans: a modular construction language that feels digital and contemporary while staying clean and consistent across letters and numerals.
Distinctive details include a squared, open “G” with a horizontal spur, a rectangular “Q” with a short diagonal tail, and a stylized “W” that reads as a double‑u with deep inner joins. Straight-sided curves and consistent corner radii create a strong visual system that holds up well in both all-caps and mixed-case settings.