Sans Superellipse Vuti 9 is a regular weight, very wide, monoline, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, logos, ui display, branding, posters, futuristic, techy, sleek, industrial, digital, sci‑fi styling, interface clarity, geometric branding, modern signage, systemic design, rounded corners, squared bowls, modular, geometric, extended.
A geometric sans with a squared, superelliptic construction: most curves resolve into rounded rectangles with consistent corner radii and uniform stroke thickness. Counters are boxy and open, with a clean, engineered rhythm and generous horizontal span across many letters. Terminals are predominantly flat and squared-off, and joins stay crisp, giving the alphabet a modular, almost stencil-like clarity without actual breaks. Uppercase forms lean wide and stable; lowercase keeps the same squared geometry, with single-storey a and g and simple, compact apertures that preserve the font’s rigid grid logic.
Best suited to headlines, wordmarks, and short UI or interface labels where its wide, squared curves can read as intentional design. It also works well for tech branding, posters, and titling where a clean, futuristic voice is desired; for long passages, its strong geometric repetition will be more of a stylistic statement than a neutral text choice.
The overall tone is futuristic and technical, suggesting interfaces, machinery, and sci‑fi signage. Its wide stance and rounded-square geometry feel modern and controlled rather than friendly, projecting precision and a deliberate, constructed personality.
The design appears intended to translate rounded-rectangle geometry into a cohesive alphabet that reads clearly at display sizes while delivering a contemporary, tech-forward aesthetic. Its consistent stroke system and modular shapes prioritize a controlled, manufactured look over calligraphic nuance.
Distinctive identity comes from the rounded-rectangle bowls (notably in C, O, Q, and e) and the straight, track-like horizontals that create a consistent, screen-oriented texture in text. Numerals follow the same system, with angular diagonals on 4 and 7 and squarish loops on 8 and 9, reinforcing the engineered, display-first character.